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India national cricket team

The India men's national cricket team represents India in men's international cricket. It is governed by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), and is a Full Member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) with Test, One Day International (ODI) and Twenty20 International (T20I) status.

India
Nickname(s)Men in Blue
AssociationBoard of Control for Cricket in India
Personnel
CaptainRohit Sharma
CoachRahul Dravid
Batting coachVikram Rathour
Bowling coachParas Mhambrey
Fielding coachT. Dilip
History
Test status acquired1931
International Cricket Council
ICC statusFull Member (1926)
ICC regionACC
ICC Rankings Current[3] Best-ever
Test 1st 1st (1 April 1973)
ODI 1st 1st (January 2013)
T20I 1st 1st[1][2] (28 March 2014)
Tests
First Testv  England at Lord's, London; 25‍–‍28 June 1932
Last Testv  England at Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium, Dharamshala; 7‍–‍9 March 2024
Tests Played Won/Lost
Total[4] 579 178/178
(222 draws, 1 tie)
This year[5] 6 5/1
(0 draws)
World Test Championship appearances2 (first in 2019–2021)
Best result Runners-up (2019–21, 2021–23)
One Day Internationals
First ODIv  England at Headingley, Leeds; 13 July 1974
Last ODIv  South Africa at Boland Park, Paarl; 21 December 2023
ODIs Played Won/Lost
Total[6] 1,055 559/443
(9 ties, 44 no results)
This year[7] 0 0/0
(0 ties, 0 no results)
World Cup appearances13 (first in 1975)
Best result Champions (1983, 2011)
Twenty20 Internationals
First T20Iv  South Africa at Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg; 1 December 2006
Last T20Iv  Afghanistan at M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore; 17 January 2024
T20Is Played Won/Lost
Total[8] 219 140/68
(5 ties, 6 no results)
This year[9] 3 2/0
(1 tie, 0 no results)
T20 World Cup appearances8 (first in 2007)
Best result Champions (2007)

Test kit

ODI kit

T20I kit

As of 9 March 2024

The team played its first international match on 25 June 1932 in a Test against England at Lord's Cricket Ground in London, becoming the sixth team to be granted Test cricket status. India's first Test victory was in 1952, and success was limited in the team's first fifty years of international cricket, with only 35 wins in 196 Tests.[10] However, they gained strength in the 1970s with the emergence of the Indian spin quartet, and players like Sunil Gavaskar, Gundappa Viswanath, and Kapil Dev. In men's limited-overs cricket, India made its ODI debut against England in 1974 and its T20I debut against South Africa in 2006.

India's men's national cricket team has won five major ICC tournaments, winning the Cricket World Cup twice (1983 and 2011),[11] the ICC T20 World Cup once (2007) and the ICC Champions Trophy twice (2002 and 2013). They have also finished as runners-up in the World Cup twice (2003 and 2023), the T20 World Cup once (2014), the Champions Trophy twice (2000 and 2017) and the ICC World Test Championship finals in the first two editions (2021, 2023). India was the second team (after the West Indies) to win the World Cup, and the first to win the competition on home soil after winning it in 2011.

They have won the Asia Cup eight times, in 1984, 1988, 1990‍–‍91, 1995, 2010, 2016, 2018 and 2023; and have finished runners-up three times (1997, 2004, 2008). India also won a gold medal in the 2022 Asian Games. Other achievements include winning the ICC Test Championship Mace five times and the ICC ODI Championship Shield once. As of December 2023, the team is top of the ICC rankings for Tests, ODIs and T20Is.[12] With such success, it is one of the most successful teams in international cricket.[13]

History edit

Early history (1700s–1918) edit

The British brought cricket to India in the early 1700s, with the first cricket match played in 1721.[14] It was played and adopted by Kolis of Gujarat because they were sea pirates and outlaws who always loot the British ships so East India Company tried to manage the Kolis in cricket and been successful.[15][16][17] In 1848, the Parsi community in Mumbai formed the Oriental Cricket Club, the first cricket club to be established by Indians. After slow beginnings, the Europeans eventually invited the Parsis to play a match in 1877.[18] By 1912, the Parsis, Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims of Bombay played a quadrangular tournament with the Europeans every year.[18] In the early 1900s, some Indians went on to play for the England cricket team. Some of these, such as Ranjitsinhji and Duleepsinhji were greatly appreciated by the British and their names went on to be used for the Ranji Trophy and Duleep Trophy – two major first-class tournaments in India. In 1911, an Indian men's cricket team, captained by Bhupinder Singh of Patiala, went on their first official tour of the British Isles, but only played English county teams and not the England cricket team.[19][20]

 
C. K. Nayudu, India's first Test cricket captain

Test match status (1918–1970) edit

India was invited to the International Cricket Council in 1926, and made their debut as a Test playing nation in England in 1932, led by CK Nayudu, who was considered the best Indian batsman at the time.[21] The one-off Test match between the two sides was played at Lord's in London. The team was not strong in their batting[22] at this point and went on to lose by 158 runs.[23] India hosted its first men's Test cricket series in 1933. England was the visiting team that played two Tests in Bombay (now Mumbai) and Calcutta (now Kolkata). The visitors won the series 2–0. The Indian team continued to improve throughout the 1930s and 1940s but did not achieve an international victory during this period. In the early 1940s, India did not play any men's Test cricket due to World War II. The team's first series as an independent country was in late 1947 against Don Bradman's Australian cricket team in England in 1948 (a name given to the Australia national cricket team of that time). It was also the first Test series India played which was not against England. Australia men's cricket team won the five-match series 4–0, with Bradman tormenting the Indian bowling in his final Australian summer.[24] India subsequently played their first Test series at home not against England, but against the West Indies in 1948. West Indies won the five Test series 1–0.[25]

 
Lala Amarnath batting during a match against Middlesex at Lord's, c. 1936[26]
 
Elizabeth II with members of the Indian cricket team during their tour of England in 1952

India recorded their first Test victory, in their 24th match, against England at Madras in 1952.[27] Later in the same year, they won their first Test series, which was against Pakistan.[28] They continued their improvement throughout the early 1950s with a series win against New Zealand in 1956. However, they did not win again in the remainder of the decade and lost badly to strong Australian and English sides. On 24 August 1959, India lost by an innings in the Test to complete the only 5–0 whitewash ever inflicted by England.[29] The next decade saw India's reputation develop as a team with a strong record at home. They won their first Test series against England at home in 1961–62 and also won a home series against New Zealand. They managed to draw home series against Pakistan and Australia and another series against England. In this same period, India also won its first series outside the subcontinent, against New Zealand in 1967–68.[30]

The key to India's bowling in the 1970s were the Indian spin quartetBishan Singh Bedi, E. A. S. Prasanna, B. S. Chandrasekhar and Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan. This period also saw the emergence of two of India's best ever batsmen, Sunil Gavaskar and Gundappa Viswanath. Indian pitches have had the tendency to support spin and the spin quartet exploited this to create collapses in opposing batting line-ups.[31][32] These players were responsible for the back-to-back series wins in 1971 in the West Indies and in England, under the captaincy of Ajit Wadekar. Gavaskar scored 774 runs in the West Indian series while Dilip Sardesai's 112 played a big part in their one Test win.[33][34][35]

One-day cricket and ICC Cricket World Cup success (1970–1985) edit

The advent of men's One Day International (ODI) cricket in 1971 created a new dimension in the cricket world. However, India was not considered strong in ODIs at this point and batsmen such as the captain Gavaskar were known for their defensive approach to batting. India began as a weak team in ODIs and did not qualify for the second round in the first two editions of the Cricket World Cup.[36] Gavaskar infamously blocked his way to 36 not out off 174 balls against England in the first World Cup in 1975; India scored just 132 for 3 and lost by 202 runs.[37]

In contrast, India fielded a strong team in Test matches and was particularly strong at home, where their combination of stylish batsmen and beguiling spinners were at their best. India set a then Test record in the third Test against the West Indies at Port-of-Spain in 1976, when they chased 403 to win, thanks to 112 from Viswanath.[38] In November 1976, the team established another record by scoring 524 for 9 declared against New Zealand at Kanpur without any individual batsman scoring a century.[39] There were six fifties, the highest being 70 by Mohinder Amarnath.[40] This innings was only the eighth instance in Test cricket where all eleven batsmen reached double figures.[41]

 
Graph showing India's Test match results against all Test match teams from 1932 to September 2006

During the 1980s, India developed a more attack-minded batting line-up with stroke makers such as the wristy Mohammad Azharuddin, Dilip Vengsarkar and all-rounders Kapil Dev and Ravi Shastri. India won the Cricket World Cup in 1983, defeating the favourites and the two-time defending champions West Indies in the final at Lord's, owing to a strong bowling performance. In spite of this, the team performed poorly in the Test arena, including 28 consecutive Test matches without a victory. In 1984, India won the Asia Cup and in 1985, won the World Championship of Cricket in Australia. Apart from this, India remained a weak team outside the Indian subcontinent. India's Test series victory in 1986 against England remained the last Test series win by India outside the subcontinent for the next 19 years. The 1980s saw Gavaskar and Kapil Dev (India's best all-rounder to date) at the pinnacle of their careers. Gavaskar made a Test record 34 centuries as he became the first man to reach the 10,000 run mark. Kapil Dev later became the highest wicket-taker in Test cricket with 434 wickets.[42] The period was also marked by an unstable leadership, with Gavaskar and Kapil exchanging the captaincy several times.[43][44]

Late 20th century (1985–2000) edit

The addition of Sachin Tendulkar and Anil Kumble to the national side in 1989 and 1990 further improved the team. The following year, Javagal Srinath, India's fastest bowler since Amar Singh made his debut. Despite this, during the 1990s, India did not win any of its 33 Tests outside the subcontinent while it won 17 out of its 30 Tests at home. After being eliminated by neighbours Sri Lanka on home soil at the 1996 Cricket World Cup semi-final, the team underwent a year of change as Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid, later to become captains of the team, made their debut in the same Test at Lord's. Tendulkar replaced Azharuddin as captain in late 1996, but after a personal and team form slump, Tendulkar relinquished the captaincy and Azharuddin was reinstated at the beginning of 1998.[45]

 
With 619 wickets, Anil Kumble is the world's fourth highest wicket-taker in Tests and India's highest Test and ODI wicket-taker.[46]

After failing to reach the semi-finals at the 1999 Cricket World Cup, Tendulkar was again made captain, and had another poor run, losing 3–0 on a tour of Australia and then 2–0 at home to South Africa. Tendulkar resigned, vowing never to captain the team again.

21st century edit

The team was further damaged in 2000 when former captain Azharuddin and fellow batsman Ajay Jadeja were implicated in a match-fixing scandal and given life and five-year bans respectively.[47][48] This period was described by the BBC as "the Indian cricket's worst hour".[49] However, the new core – Tendulkar, Dravid, Kumble and Ganguly – swore not to let this happen to them again, and led Indian cricket out of the dark times. The first three put aside personal ambitions to let Ganguly lead them into a new era.[50]

The Indian team underwent major improvements under the captaincy of Ganguly and the guidance of John Wright, India's first foreign coach.[51][52] In the Kolkata Test match, India became only the third team in the history of Test cricket to win a Test match after following on. Australian captain Steve Waugh labelled India as the "Final Frontier" because of his side's inability to win a Test series in India.[53] In 2002, India were joint-winners of the ICC Champions Trophy with Sri Lanka and then went to the 2003 Cricket World Cup in South Africa, where they reached the final, only to be beaten by Australia. A convincing ODI series win in Pakistan in early 2006, following a loss in the Test series, gave India the world record of 17 successive ODI victories while batting second.[54]

In September 2007, India won the first-ever ICC Men's T20 World Cup held in South Africa, beating Pakistan by five runs in the final.[55] On 2 April 2011, India won the 2011 Cricket World Cup by defeating Sri Lanka in the final, thus becoming the third team after West Indies and Australia to win the World Cup twice.[56] India also became the first team to win the World Cup on home soil.[57] India defeated England in the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final and captain M. S. Dhoni became the first men's cricket team captain in history to win the three major ICC trophies, namely the Cricket World Cup, ICC Men's T20 World Cup and ICC Champions Trophy.[58][59]

 
Indian players celebrating after taking a wicket against New Zealand in 2010

In the 2014 ICC Men's World Twenty20 hosted in Bangladesh, India narrowly missed out on another ICC trophy by losing to Sri Lanka in the final.[60] India was knocked out of the 2015 Cricket World Cup in the semi-final to eventual winners Australia.[61] India then began 2016 by winning the 2016 Asia Cup, remaining unbeaten throughout the tournament.[62] The team were favourites to win the 2016 ICC World Twenty20, which was being held at home, but lost in the semi-final to eventual champions West Indies.[63] India defeated Pakistan in their first game of the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy but lost to the same opponents in the final, the first time they had met at this stage of a tournament since 2007.[64][65]

The Indian team's next major global tournament was the 2019 Cricket World Cup where the team finished first in the group stage with seven wins and only one loss which came against host nation England.[66] They made the semis but lost to New Zealand by 18 runs.[67] Rohit Sharma was the highest run-scorer for the team with 648 runs. India played the 2021 ICC World Test Championship Final against New Zealand in Southampton in which they lost by eight wickets.[68] India qualified for the semi-finals in the 2022 T20 World Cup, but lost to England by ten wickets.

After a 3–1 series win against Australia on home soil.[69] India played the 2023 ICC World Test Championship final against Australia at The Oval in which they lost by 209 runs.[70] India went on to win the 2023 Asia Cup final against Sri Lanka in R. Premadasa Stadium by ten wickets .[71]Kuldeep Yadav was the player of the tournament with nine wickets. Meanwhile, the Indian men's cricket team secured a gold medal in 2022 Asian games due to higher seeding after the final against Afghanisthan was washed out.[72]

[73]India in their first game of Cricket World Cup 2023, defeated Australia by six wickets, but after defeating New Zealand in the semi-finals by 70 runs, they lost to their same opponent Australia in the final by six wickets, resulting in another win for the Aussies and lifting the World Cup after eight years for the sixth time. Virat Kohli was the highest run scorer of the ODI World Cup with 765 runs. Additionally, Kohli made history by achieving his 50th ODI century at the Cricket World Cup.[74]

Governing body edit

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is the governing body for the Indian cricket team and first-class cricket in India. The Board has been operating since 1929 and represents India at the International Cricket Council (ICC). Its headquarters is situated in the 'Cricket centre' at Churchgate in Mumbai, Maharashtra. Amongst the richest sporting organisations in the world, it sold media rights for India's matches from 2006 to 2010 for $612,000,000.[75] Roger Binny is present BCCI president and Jay Shah is secretary.

The International Cricket Council determines India's upcoming matches through its future tours program. However, the BCCI, with its influential financial position in the cricketing world, has often challenged the ICC's program and called for more series between India, Australia and England which are more likely to earn more revenue as opposed to tours with Bangladesh or Zimbabwe.[76] In the past, the BCCI has also come into conflict with the ICC regarding sponsorships.[77]

Selection committee edit

Selection for the Indian cricket team occurs through the BCCI's zonal selection policy, where each of the five zones is represented by one selector and one of the members nominated by BCCI as the chairman of the selection committee. This has sometimes led to controversy as to whether these selectors are biased towards their zones.[78]

Until 18 November 2022, Chetan Sharma was the chief selector and Debashish Mohanty, Harvinder Singh and Sunil Joshi were members. The entire panel was sacked after the unsuccessful performance of the team in 2022 ICC Men's T20 World Cup.[79]

On 7 January 2023, Sharma was again appointed as the chief selector along with Shiv Sunder Das, Subroto Banerjee, Salil Ankola, and Sridharan Sharath.[80]

On 17 February 2023, Sharma resigned from his post after a sting operation by a private news channel saw him make several loose comments on the Indian team with Shiv Sunder Das replacing him and acting as an interim chief selector.[81]

On 4 July 2023, Ajit Agarkar was appointed as the new chief selector and replaced Sharma.[82] He joined Das, Banerjee, Ankola and Sharath on the selection committee.[83]

Team colours edit

India plays its Test cricket matches with the traditional cricket whites with navy blue caps and helmets. The uniforms worn in limited-overs matches have different shades of blue for ODIs and T20Is, with sometimes a splash of the colours that are present in the Indian flag.[84]

 
India's cricket kit during the World Championship of Cricket.

During the 1992 and 1999 Cricket World Cups, the Indian team's kit was sponsored by ISC and ASICS respectively,[85][86] but had been without an official kit sponsor until 2001. With no official kit sponsor for the Indian team, Omtex manufactured the shirts and pants for the team, while some players chose to wear pants provided to them by their individual sponsors like Adidas and Reebok until December 2005.

In December 2005, Nike outbid its competitors Adidas and Reebok, and acquired the contract for five years which started in January 2006 ahead of Indian team's tour to Pakistan.[87] Nike was a long time kit supplier to team India with two extensions for a period of five years each time; in 2011[88] and 2016[89] respectively.

After Nike ended its contract in September 2020,[90] MPL Sports Apparel & Accessories, a subsidiary of online gaming platform Mobile Premier League replaced Nike as the kit manufacturer in November 2020 ahead of Indian team's tour to Australia, which was supposed to run until December 2023.[91][92]

In November 2022, MPL Sports decided to exit the deal before the end of their contract and hand over their rights to Kewal Kiran Clothing Limited (KKCL).[93]

In January 2023, MPL appointed Kewal Kiran Clothing Limited (KKCL) and Killer Jeans (a brand owned by KKCL) as interim sponsors until May 2023.[94][95]

In February 2023, it was announced that Adidas will begin a five-year sponsorship deal in June 2023 ahead of ICC World Test Championship final, replacing KKCL.[96]

In May 2023, BCCI officially announced Adidas as their kit sponsor for the next five years running until March 2028.[97][98][99]

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor [100]
1992 ISC
1999 ASICS ITC Limited
(Wills & ITC Hotels)
1993–2001
2001–2005 Omtex Sahara
2006–2013 Nike
2014–2017 Star India
2017–2019 OPPO
2019–2020 BYJU's
2020–2022 MPL Sports
2023 Killer Jeans
2023 – present Adidas Dream11
Sponsorship for ICC Tournaments
Tournament Kit Manufacturer Sleeve Sponsor
1975 Cricket World Cup
1979 Cricket World Cup
1983 Cricket World Cup
1987 Cricket World Cup
1992 Cricket World Cup ISC
1996 Cricket World Cup Wills
1998 ICC KnockOut Trophy
1999 Cricket World Cup ASICS
2000 ICC KnockOut Trophy
2002 ICC Champions Trophy Omtex
2003 Cricket World Cup Aamby Valley
2004 ICC Champions Trophy Sahara
2006 ICC Champions Trophy Nike
2007 Cricket World Cup
2007 ICC Men's T20 World Cup
2009 ICC Men's T20 World Cup
2009 ICC Champions Trophy
2010 ICC Men's T20 World Cup
2011 Cricket World Cup
2012 ICC Men's T20 World Cup
2013 ICC Champions Trophy
2014 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Star India
2015 Cricket World Cup
2016 ICC Men's T20 World Cup
2017 ICC Champions Trophy OPPO
2019 Cricket World Cup
2021 ICC World Test Championship MPL Sports BYJU's
2021 ICC Men's T20 World Cup
2022 ICC Men's T20 World Cup
2023 ICC World Test Championship Adidas
2023 Cricket World Cup Dream11
2024 ICC Men's T20 World Cup

Sponsorship edit

Current Sponsors & Partners[101]
Team sponsor Dream11
Kit sponsor Adidas
Title sponsor IDFC FIRST Bank
Official partner(s) SBI Life
Campa
Atomberg Technologies

PRAN-RFL Group

(Mr. Noodles)

Official broadcaster Viacom18
(Sports18 & JioCinema)

Team sponsorship edit

Dream11 (Sporta Technologies Pvt. Ltd.) was announced as the sponsor for the team on 1 July 2023.[102] Their sponsorship is supposed to run until 31 March 2026 for a period of three years.[103]

Previously, BYJU's was the sponsor for the Indian team from 5 September 2019 until 31 March 2023, after OPPO handed over the rights to them.[104]

OPPO's sponsorship was supposed to run from 2017 until 2022, but they handed over to BYJU's. On 7 March 2022, BYJU's extended its sponsorship for one year.[105][106]

Previously, the Indian team has been sponsored by BYJU's from September 2019 until March 2023, OPPO from May 2017 until August 2019, Star India from January 2014 until March 2017,[107] Sahara India Pariwar from June 2001 until December 2013 [108][109] and ITC Limited (with Wills and ITC Hotels brands) from June 1993 until May 2001.[110][111]

Official partners edit

On 9 January 2024, BCCI announced Campa and Atomberg Technologies as official partners for its domestic & international season during 2024–26.[112]

On 20 September 2023, BCCI announced SBI Life as the official partner for its domestic & international season during 2023–26.[113]

In August 2023, IDFC First Bank replaced Mastercard as the current title sponsor for all international and domestic matches played in India for the 2023–26 season.[114]

The title sponsorship was initially given to Paytm for all matches played between 2015 and 2023 [115] but they handed over to Mastercard in 2022.

On 30 August 2019, following the conclusion of the expression of interest process for official partners' rights, the BCCI announced that Sporta Technologies Pvt. Ltd. (Dream11), LafargeHolcim (ACC Cements, and Ambuja Cements) and Hyundai Motors India Ltd. have acquired the official partners' rights for the BCCI International and Domestic matches during 2019–2023.[116]

Disney Star and Airtel have been title sponsors previously.[117][118]

Official broadcasters edit

Viacom18 is the official broadcaster until March 2028 for all the men's international and domestic matches played in India.[119][120] Sports18 telecasts the international and domestic matches on TV, while it is live streamed on JioCinema as OTT (over the top) platform.[121]

International grounds edit

There are numerous world-renowned cricket stadiums located in India. Most grounds are under the administration of various state cricket boards as opposed to being under the control of the BCCI. The Bombay Gymkhana was the first ground in India to host a full-scale cricket match featuring an Indian cricket team. This was between the Parsis and the Europeans in 1877. The first stadium to host a Test match in India was also the Gymkhana Ground in Bombay in 1933, the only Test it ever hosted. The second and third Tests in the 1933 series were hosted at Eden Gardens and Chepauk. The Feroz Shah Kotla Ground in Delhi was the first stadium to host a Test match after independence, a draw against the West Indies in 1948, the first of a five-Test series. There are 21 stadiums in India that have hosted at least one official Test match. In recent years, there has been an increase in the number of world-class cricket stadiums in India.[122][123]

India currently has the world's largest cricket stadium.[124][125] The Narendra Modi Stadium, is a cricket stadium in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India. Eden Gardens in Kolkata has hosted the most Tests, and also has the third-largest seating capacity of any cricket stadium in the world. Founded in 1864, it is one of the most historical stadiums in India, having hosted numerous historical and controversial matches.[126][127] Other major stadiums in India include the Arun Jaitley Cricket Stadium, which was established in 1883 and hosted memorable matches including Anil Kumble's ten wickets in an innings haul against Pakistan.[128]

The Bombay Gymkhana hosted the first Test match in India which is the only Test it has hosted to date.[129] Wankhede Stadium, established in 1974, has a capacity to hold 33,000 spectators and is currently the most popular venue in the city. It has hosted 24 Test matches. It was the unofficial successor of the Brabourne Stadium, which is also located in Mumbai. Mumbai is often considered the cricketing capital of India because of its fans and the talent it produces (see Mumbai cricket team). Thus the stadium regularly hosts major Test matches.[130] The M. A. Chidambaram Stadium in Chepauk is also considered to be an important historical Indian cricket ground, established in the early 1900s, and it was the site of India's first Test victory.[131]

Captains edit

A total of 35 men have captained the Indian men's cricket team in at least one Test match, although only six have led the team in more than 25 matches, and six have captained the team in men's ODIs but not Tests. India's first captain of the men's cricket team was C. K. Nayudu, who led the team in four matches against England: one in England in 1932 and a series of three matches at home in 1933–34. Lala Amarnath, India's fourth captain of the men's cricket team and the first Indian to score a century in Test cricket while playing for India, led the team in its first Test match after Indian independence. He also captained the side to its first Test victory and first series win, both in a three-match series at home against Pakistan in 1952–53. From 1952 until 1961–62, India men's cricket team had a number of captains such as Vijay Hazare, Polly Umrigar and Nari Contractor.[132][133]

The Nawab of Pataudi, Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi, was the men's team's captain for 36 Test matches from 1961–62 to 1969–70, returning for another four matches against West Indies in 1974–75. In the early years of his captaincy tenure, the team was whitewashed in the West Indies, England and Australia. However, in 1967–68, Pataudi led India men's cricket team on its maiden New Zealand tour, which ended in India winning the Test series 3–1.[134] In 1970–71, Ajit Wadekar took over the captaincy from Pataudi. Under Wadekar's captaincy, India registered its first Test series win in the West Indies and England. India played its first men's ODI in 1974, also under his captaincy.[135] India won its first men's ODI under the captaincy of Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan in the 1975 Cricket World Cup, against East Africa. Between 1975–76 and 1978–79, Bishan Singh Bedi captained the team in 22 men's Tests and four ODIs, winning six Tests and one ODI.[136][137]

Sunil Gavaskar took over as men's Test and ODI captain in 1978–79, leading India in 47 Test matches and 37 ODIs, winning nine Tests and 14 ODIs. He was succeeded by Kapil Dev in the 1980s, who captained for 34 Test matches, including four victories. Kapil Dev led India to victory in 39 of his 74 ODIs in charge, including the 1983 Cricket World Cup. Kapil Dev also captained India's 2–0 Test series victory in England in 1986. Between 1987–88 and 1989–90, India had three captains in Dilip Vengsarkar, Ravi Shastri and Krishnamachari Srikkanth. Vengsarkar took over the captaincy from Kapil Dev after the 1987 Cricket World Cup. Although he started with two centuries in his first series as captain, his captaincy period was turbulent and he lost the job following a disastrous tour of the West Indies in early 1989 and a stand-off with the Indian Cricket Board (BCCI).[138][139]

India has had six regular Test captains of the men's cricket team since Mohammad Azharuddin took charge in 1989. Azharuddin led the team in 47 Test matches from 1989–90 to 1998–99, winning 14, and in 174 ODIs, winning 90. He was followed by Sachin Tendulkar, who captained the men's cricket team in 25 Test matches and 73 ODIs in the late 1990s; Tendulkar was relatively unsuccessful[140][141] as a captain, winning only four Test matches and 23 ODIs.

Sourav Ganguly became the regular captain of the men's team in both Tests and ODIs in 2000.[142] He remained captain until 2005–06 and became the then most successful Indian captain, winning 21 of his 49 Test matches in charge and 76 of his 146 ODIs. Under his captaincy, India became the joint-winners of the 2002 ICC Champions Trophy with Sri Lanka, and the runners-up of the 2003 Cricket World Cup. India lost only three Tests at home under Ganguly and managed to draw Test series in England and Australia. Rahul Dravid took over as men's Test captain in 2005. In 2006, he led India to its first Test series victory in the West Indies in more than 30 years.[143]

In September 2007, MS Dhoni was named as the new captain of the men's ODI and T20I teams, after Dravid stepped down from the post. Soon after taking up the captaincy, Dhoni led the team to the inaugural World men's Twenty20 title. Anil Kumble was appointed Test captain in November 2007, but retired from international cricket in November 2008 after captaining in 14 Tests. Dhoni succeeded him as the men's Test captain, making him the captain in all formats. Under the captaincy of Dhoni, the Indian men's cricket team held the number one position in the ICC Men's Test Team Rankings for 21 months (from November 2009 to August 2011), and set a national record for most back-to-back ODI wins (nine straight wins).[144] Dhoni also led the team to victory in 2011 Cricket World Cup and 2013 ICC Champions Trophy. Thus, Dhoni became the first captain in history to win all three major ICC trophies, namely- the ICC Cricket World Cup in 2011, ICC Men's T20 World Cup in 2007 and the ICC Champions Trophy in 2013.[145] However, the team performed poorly in away Tests from 2011 to 2014 and Dhoni retired from Test cricket in December 2014, with Virat Kohli being named as the new Test captain.[146] Dhoni resigned as captain of the ODI and T20I teams in January 2017 and Kohli succeeded him at the position.[147]

Under Kohli's captaincy, India was unbeaten in 19 Test matches, starting from a 3–0 series win over New Zealand and ending with a 2–1 series win over Australia. India also had an unbeaten streak of winning nine consecutive Test series, starting with a 3–0 series win over Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka and ending with a 1–0 series win over Sri Lanka at home. India also became only the third team after Australia and South Africa to have won their most recent Test series simultaneously against all the other Test-playing nations. As per winning percentage in Test matches, Kohli was India's second most successful Test captain, behind Ajinkya Rahane, having won more than 58% of Test matches (at least two games).[148]

In November 2021, Rohit Sharma was appointed as the new T20I captain of the Indian men's cricket team after Kohli resigned from the role.[149] Kohli led India one last time in T20Is at the T20 World Cup 2021. Under Rohit Sharma's first series as permanent captaincy, India whitewashed New Zealand at home in the T20I series 3–0.[150] In December 2021, Sharma was also appointed as the new ODI captain of the Indian men's cricket team, replacing Kohli ahead of their away series against South Africa.[151] Kohli later quit as Test captain as well, after their Test series loss to South Africa.[152] Sharma replaced Kohli as Test captain before the Test series against Sri Lanka[153] and is now the Full-Time Captain of the Indian men's cricket team.

Current squad edit

 
Rohit Sharma became captain of India's national cricket team in November 2021.

The BCCI released the list of their 2023–24 annual player contracts on 28 February 2024.[154] Players can still be upgraded to a Grade C annual player contract on a pro-rata basis by meeting the criteria of playing a minimum of three Tests or eight ODIs or ten T20Is in the specified period (1 October 2023 to 30 September 2024).

This is a list of every active player who is contracted to BCCI, has played for India since March 2023 or was named in the recent Test, ODI or T20I squads. Uncapped players are listed in italics.[155]

Last updated: 11 March 2024

Key
Symbol Meaning
CG Contract grade with BCCI
No. Shirt number of the player in all formats
Format Denotes the player recently played in which particular format, not his entire career
Name Age Batting style Bowling style Domestic team IPL Team CG Forms No. Captaincy Last Test Last ODI Last T20I
Batters
Ruturaj Gaikwad 27 Right-handed Maharashtra Chennai Super Kings C ODI, T20I 31   2023   2023
Shubman Gill 24 Right-handed Right-arm off spin Punjab Gujarat Titans A Test, ODI, T20I 77   2024   2023   2024
Shreyas Iyer 29 Right-handed Right-arm leg spin Mumbai Kolkata Knight Riders Test, ODI, T20I 96   2024   2023   2023
Yashasvi Jaiswal 22 Left-handed Right-arm leg spin Mumbai Rajasthan Royals B Test, T20I 64   2024   2024
Sarfaraz Khan 26 Right-handed Right-arm leg break Mumbai C Test 97   2024
Virat Kohli 35 Right-handed Right-arm medium Delhi Royal Challengers Bengaluru A+ Test, ODI, T20I 18   2024   2023   2024
Devdutt Padikkal 23 Left-handed Karnataka Lucknow Super Giants Test 37   2024   2021
Rajat Patidar 30 Right-handed Madhya Pradesh Royal Challengers Bengaluru C Test, ODI 87   2024   2023
Rohit Sharma 37 Right-handed Right-arm off break Mumbai Mumbai Indians A+ Test, ODI, T20I 45 Test, ODI, T20I (C)   2024   2023   2024
Rinku Singh 26 Left-handed Right-arm off break Uttar Pradesh Kolkata Knight Riders C ODI, T20I 35   2023   2024
Sai Sudharsan 22 Left-handed Right-arm leg break Tamil Nadu Gujarat Titans ODI 66   2023
Suryakumar Yadav 33 Right-handed Right-arm off spin Mumbai Mumbai Indians B ODI, T20I 63   2023   2023   2023
All-rounders
Ravichandran Ashwin 37 Right-handed Right-arm off spin Tamil Nadu Rajasthan Royals A Test, ODI 99   2024   2023   2022
Akash Deep 27 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Bengal Royal Challengers Bengaluru F Test 41   2024
Shivam Dube 30 Left-handed Right-arm medium Mumbai Chennai Super Kings C T20I 25   2019   2024
Ravindra Jadeja 35 Left-handed Slow left-arm orthodox Saurashtra Chennai Super Kings A+ Test, ODI, T20I 8   2024   2023   2023
Hardik Pandya 30 Right-handed Right-arm medium-fast Baroda Mumbai Indians A ODI, T20I 33 ODI, T20I (VC)   2018   2023   2023
Axar Patel 30 Left-handed Slow left-arm orthodox Gujarat Delhi Capitals B Test, ODI, T20I 20   2024   2023   2024
Washington Sundar 24 Left-handed Right-arm off spin Tamil Nadu Sunrisers Hyderabad C ODI, T20I 5   2021   2023   2024
Tilak Varma 21 Left-handed Right arm off spin Hyderabad Mumbai Indians C ODI, T20I 72   2023   2024
Wicket-keepers
Srikar Bharat 30 Right-handed Andhra Kolkata Knight Riders C Test 14   2024
Dhruv Jurel 23 Right-handed Uttar Pradesh Rajasthan Royals C Test 16   2024
Ishan Kishan 25 Left-handed Jharkhand Mumbai Indians ODI, T20I 32   2023   2023   2023
KL Rahul 32 Right-handed Karnataka Lucknow Super Giants A Test, ODI 1   2024   2023   2022
Sanju Samson 29 Right-handed Kerala Rajasthan Royals C ODI, T20I 9   2023   2024
Jitesh Sharma 30 Right-handed Vidarbha Punjab Kings C T20I 6   2024
Rishabh Pant 26 Left-handed Delhi Delhi Capitals B T20I 17   2022   2022   2022
Pace bowlers
Jasprit Bumrah 30 Right-handed Right-arm fast Gujarat Mumbai Indians A+ Test, ODI, T20I 93 Test (VC)   2024   2023   2023
Deepak Chahar 31 Right-handed Right-arm medium Rajasthan Chennai Super Kings T20I 90   2022   2023
Yash Dayal 26 Right-handed Left-arm medium-fast Uttar Pradesh Royal Challengers Bengaluru F
Vidwath Kaverappa 25 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Karnataka Punjab Kings F
Avesh Khan 27 Right-handed Right arm fast-medium Madhya Pradesh Rajasthan Royals C ODI, T20I 65   2023   2024
Mukesh Kumar 30 Right-handed Right arm medium Bengal Delhi Capitals C Test, ODI, T20I 49   2024   2023   2024
Prasidh Krishna 28 Right-handed Right arm fast-medium Karnataka Rajasthan Royals C Test, ODI, T20I 24   2024   2023   2023
Umran Malik 24 Right-handed Right-arm fast Jammu and Kashmir Sunrisers Hyderabad F ODI 21   2023   2023
Mohammed Shami 33 Right-handed Right-arm fast Bengal Gujarat Titans A ODI 11   2023   2023   2022
Arshdeep Singh 25 Left-handed Left-arm medium-fast Punjab Punjab Kings C ODI, T20I 2   2023   2024
Mohammed Siraj 30 Right-handed Right-arm fast Hyderabad Royal Challengers Bengaluru A Test, ODI, T20I 73   2024   2023   2023
Shardul Thakur 32 Right-handed Right-arm medium Mumbai Chennai Super Kings C Test, ODI 54   2023   2023   2022
Jaydev Unadkat 32 Right-handed Left-arm medium Saurashtra Sunrisers Hyderabad ODI 91   2023   2023   2018
Vijaykumar Vyshak 27 Right-handed Right-arm medium Karnataka Royal Challengers Bengaluru F
Spin bowlers
Ravi Bishnoi 23 Right-handed Right-arm leg spin Gujarat Lucknow Super Giants C T20I 56   2022   2024
Yuzvendra Chahal 33 Right-handed Right-arm leg spin Haryana Rajasthan Royals T20I 3   2023   2023
Kuldeep Yadav 29 Left-handed Left-arm wrist spin Uttar Pradesh Delhi Capitals B Test, ODI, T20I 23   2024   2023   2024

Pay grade edit

BCCI awards central contracts to its players, their pay is graded according to the importance of the player. Players' salaries are as follows:[154]

  • Grade A+ – 7 crore (US$877,000)
  • Grade A – 5 crore (US$626,000)
  • Grade B – 3 crore (US$376,000)
  • Grade C – 1 crore (US$125,000)
  • Grade F – Fast Bowling Contracts
Match fees

Players also receive a match fee of 15 lakh (US$19,000) per Test match, 6 lakh (US$7,500) per ODI, and 3 lakh (US$3,800) per T20I.

Coaching staff edit

Position Name
Head coach Rahul Dravid[156]
Batting coach Vikram Rathour[157]
Bowling coach Paras Mhambrey[158]
Fielding coach T. Dilip[159]
Physiotherapist Nitin Patel[160]
Strength and conditioning coach Sohum Desai[160]

Rahul Dravid was appointed as the head coach of India from November 2021 replacing Ravi Shastri, under whom India won several historic matches. Dravid was also the coach of India national under-19 cricket team and India A cricket team before becoming the head coach.[161]

Tournament history edit

A red box around the year indicates tournaments played within India

ICC World Test Championship edit

World Test Championship record
Year League stage Final Host Final Final Position
Pos Matches Ded PC Pts PCT
P W L D T
2019–2021[162] 1/9 17 12 4 1 0 0 720 520 72.2  Rose Bowl, England Lost to   New Zealand by 8 wickets Runners-up
2021–2023[163] 2/9 18 10 5 3 0 5 216 127 58.80   The Oval, England Lost to   Australia by 209 runs Runners-up

ICC Cricket World Cup edit

World Cup record
Host and Year Round Position GP W L T NR Squad
  1975[164] Group Stage 6/8 3 1 2 0 0 Squad
  1979[165] Group Stage 7/8 3 0 3 0 0 Squad
    1983[166] Champions 1/8 8 6 2 0 0 Squad
    1987[167] Semi-finals 3/8 7 5 2 0 0 Squad
    1992[168] Group Stage 7/9 8 2 5 0 1 Squad
      1996[169] Semi-finals 3/12 7 4 3 0 0 Squad
         1999[170] Super Six 6/12 8 4 4 0 0 Squad
      2003[171] Runners-up 2/14 11 9 2 0 0 Squad
  2007[172] Group Stage 9/16 3 1 2 0 0 Squad
      2011[173] Champions 1/14 9 7 1 1 0 Squad
    2015[174] Semi-finals 3/14 8 7 1 0 0 Squad
    2019[175] Semi-finals 3/10 10 7 2 0 1 Squad
  2023[176] Runners-up 2/10 11 10 1 0 0 Squad
      2027[177] TBD
    2031[178] Qualified as co-hosts
Total 2 Titles 13/13 96 63 30 1 2

ICC T20 World Cup edit

T20 World Cup record
Host and Year Round Position GP W L T NR Squad
  2007[179] Champions 1/12 7 5 1 1 1 Squad
  2009[180] Super 8s 7/12 5 2 3 0 0 Squad
  2010[181] Super 8s 8/12 5 2 3 0 0 Squad
  2012[182] Super 8s 5/12 5 4 1 0 0 Squad
  2014[183] Runners-up 2/16 6 5 1 0 0 Squad
  2016[184] Semi-finals 4/16 5 3 2 0 0 Squad
    2021[185] Super 12s 6/16 5 3 2 0 0 Squad
  2022[186] Semi-finals 3/16 6 4 2 0 0 Squad
    2024[187] Qualified
    2026[188] Qualified as co-hosts
    2028[189] TBD
        2030[190] TBD
Total 1 Title 8/8 45 28 15 1 1

ICC Champions Trophy edit

Champions Trophy record
Host and Year Round Position GP W L T NR Squad
  1998[191] Semi-finals 3/9 2 1 1 0 0 Squad
  2000[192] Runners-up 2/11 4 3 1 0 0 Squad
  2002[193] Champions 1/12 4 3 0 0 1 Squad
  2004[194] Group stage 7/12 2 1 1 0 0 Squad
  2006[195] Group stage 5/10 3 1 2 0 0 Squad
  2009[196] Group stage 5/8 3 1 1 0 1 Squad
    2013[197] Champions 1/8 5 5 0 0 0 Squad
    2017[198] Runners-up 2/8 5 3 2 0 0 Squad
  2025[199] Qualified
  2029[200] Qualified as hosts
Total 2 Titles 8/8 28 18 8 0 2

ACC Asia Cup edit

Asia Cup record
Host and Year Round Position GP W L T NR
  1984[201] Champions 1/3 2 2 0 0 0
  1986[202] Boycotted the tournament [203]
  1988[204] Champions 1/4 4 3 1 0 0
  1990–91[205] Champions 1/3 3 2 1 0 0
  1995[206] Champions 1/4 4 3 1 0 0
  1997[207] Runners-up 2/4 4 1 2 0 1
  2000[208] First round 3/4 3 1 2 0 0
  2004[209] Runners-up 2/6 6 3 3 0 0
  2008[210] Runners-up 2/6 6 4 2 0 0
  2010[211] Champions 1/4 4 3 1 0 0
  2012[212] First round 3/4 3 2 1 0 0
  2014[213] First round 3/5 4 2 2 0 0
  2016[214] Champions 1/5 5 5 0 0 0
  2018[215] Champions 1/6 6 5 0 1 0
  2022[216] Super Fours 3/6 5 3 2 0 0
    2023[217] Champions 1/6 6 4 1 0 1
Total 8 Titles 15/16 65 43 19 1 2

Other tournaments edit

Asian Games edit

Asian Games record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR
  2010 Did Not Participate
  2014 Did Not Participate
  2022[218] Gold Medal 1/14 3 2 0 0 1
Total 1 Title 1/3 3 2 0 0 1

Commonwealth Games edit

Commonwealth Games record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR
  1998[219] Group stage 9/16 3 1 1 0 1
Total 0 Title 1/1 3 1 1 0 1

Honours edit

ICC edit

ACC edit

Others edit

Statistics edit

Tests edit

Head-to-head record

Opponent Matches Won Lost Tied Draw % Won % Lost % Drew First Last
  Afghanistan 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 0.00 0.00 2018 2018
  Australia 107 32 45 1 29 29.90 42.05 27.10 1947 2023
  Bangladesh 13 11 0 0 2 84.61 0.00 15.38 2000 2022
  England 136 35 51 0 50 25.73 37.50 36.76 1932 2024
  New Zealand 62 22 13 0 27 35.48 20.96 43.54 1955 2021
  Pakistan 59 9 12 0 38 15.25 20.34 64.41 1952 2007
  South Africa 44 16 18 0 10 36.36 40.90 23.25 1992 2023
  Sri Lanka 46 22 7 0 17 47.82 15.21 36.95 1982 2022
  West Indies 100 23 30 0 47 23.00 30.00 47.00 1948 2023
  Zimbabwe 11 7 2 0 2 63.64 18.18 18.18 1992 2005
Total 579 178 178 1 222 30.74 30.74 38.34 1932 2024
Statistics are correct as of   India v   England, 5th Test, 7–9 March 2024.[220][221]

One-Day Internationals edit

Head-to-head record

Opponent Matches Won Lost Tied No Result % Won First Last
Full Members
  Afghanistan 4 3 0 1 0 75.00 2014 2023
  Australia 151 57 84 0 10 37.74 1980 2023
  Bangladesh 41 32 8 0 1 78.04 1988 2023
  England 107 58 44 2 3 56.73 1974 2023
  Ireland 3 3 0 0 0 100.00 2007 2015
  New Zealand 118 60 50 1 7 54.09 1975 2023
  Pakistan 135 57 73 0 5 42.22 1978 2023
  South Africa 94 40 51 0 3 42.55 1988 2023
  Sri Lanka 168 99 57 1 11 63.37 1979 2023
  West Indies 142 72 64 2 4 50.70 1979 2023
  Zimbabwe 66 54 10 2 0 81.82 1983 2022
Associate Members
  Bermuda 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 2007 2007
  East Africa 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 1975 1975
  Hong Kong 2 2 0 0 0 100.00 2008 2018
  Kenya 13 11 2 0 0 84.62 1996 2004
  Namibia 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 2003 2003
    Nepal 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 2023 2023
  Netherlands 3 3 0 0 0 100.00 2003 2023
  Scotland 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 2007 2007
  United Arab Emirates 3 3 0 0 0 100.00 1994 2015
Total 1055 559 443 9 44 52.98 1974 2023
Statistics are correct as of   India v   South Africa at Boland Park, Paarl, 21 December 2023.[224][225]

Twenty20 Internationals edit

Head-to-head record

Opponent Matches Won Lost Tied Tie+Win Tie+Loss No Result % Won First Last
ICC Full Members
  Afghanistan 8 6 0 0 1 0 1 75.00 2010 2024
  Australia 31 19 11 0 0 0 1 61.29 2007 2023
  Bangladesh 13 12 1 0 0 0 0 92.30 2009 2023
  England 23 12 11 0 0 0 0 52.17 2007 2022
  Ireland 7 7 0 0 0 0 0 100.00 2009 2023
  New Zealand 25 12 10 1 2 0 0 54.00 2007 2023
  Pakistan 12 8 3 0 1 0 0 75.00 2007 2022
  South Africa 26 14 11 0 0 0 1 53.84 2006 2023
  Sri Lanka 29 19 9 0 0 0 1 67.85 2009 2023
  West Indies 30 19 10 0 0 0 1 63.33 2009 2023
  Zimbabwe 8 6 2 0 0 0 0 75.00 2010 2022
ICC Associate members
  Hong Kong 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100.00 2022 2022
  Namibia 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100.00 2021 2021
    Nepal 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100.00 2023 2023
  Netherlands 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100.00 2022 2022
  Scotland 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 100.00 2007 2021
  United Arab Emirates 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100.00 2016 2016
Total 219 140 68 1 4 0 6 63.92 2006 2024
Statistics are correct as of   India v   Afghanistan at M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru, 17 January 2024.[228][229]

Players in bold text are still active with India in T20I format.

Individual records edit

 
Sachin Tendulkar celebrating his 38th Test century during a match against Australia in 2008. He holds multiple world records including the world's leading run-scorer and century maker in both Tests and ODIs.[232]

Sachin Tendulkar, who began playing for India as a 16-year-old in 1989 and has since become the most prolific run-scorer in the history of both Test and ODI cricket, holds a large number of national batting records. He holds the record of most appearances in both Tests and ODIs, most runs in both Tests and ODIs and most centuries in Tests.[233] The highest score by an Indian is the 319 scored by Virender Sehwag in Chennai. It is the second triple century in Test cricket by an Indian, the first being a 309 also made by Sehwag although against Pakistan. The team's highest ever score was a 759/7 against England at MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai in 2016, while its lowest score was 36 against Australia in 2020.[234] In ODIs, the team's highest score is 418/5 against West Indies at Indore in 2011–12. India scored 413–5 in a match against Bermuda in 2007 World Cup which was the highest score ever in Cricket World Cup history at the time. In the same match, India set a world record of the highest winning margin in an ODI match of 257 runs.[235]

India has also had some very strong bowling figures, with spin bowler Anil Kumble being a member of the elite group of four bowlers who have taken 600 Test wickets.[236] In 1999, Kumble emulated Jim Laker to become the second bowler to take all ten wickets in a Test match innings when he took 10 wickets for 74 runs against Pakistan at the Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi.[237][238]

Many of the Indian cricket team's records are also world records, for example Tendulkar's century tally (in Tests and ODIs) and run tally (also in both Tests and ODIs).[239] Dhoni's 183 not out against Sri Lanka in 2005 is the world record score by a wicketkeeper in ODIs.[240] The Indian cricket team also holds the record sequence of 17 successful run-chases in ODIs,[241] which ended in a dramatic match against the West Indies in May 2006, which India lost by just one run.[242]

Tendulkar was the first batsman to score 200 runs (he was unbeaten on 200 from 147 deliveries including 25 fours and 3 sixes) in a single ODI innings, on 24 February 2010 against South Africa in Gwalior.[243] On 8 December 2011, this achievement was eclipsed by compatriot Virender Sehwag, who scored 219 runs from 149 deliveries (25 fours and 7 sixes) versus the West Indies in Indore.[244] On 13 November 2014 the record was broken by another Indian opening batsmen, Rohit Sharma, who scored 264 runs from 173 deliveries (33 fours and 9 sixes) against Sri Lanka in Kolkata, West Bengal. In 2013, Dhoni became the first captain in history to win all three major ICC trophies- ICC Cricket World Cup in 2011, ICC World Twenty20 in 2007 and ICC Champions Trophy in 2013.[245][246][247][248]

In 2014, Kohli became the first cricketer to win back-to-back Man of the Series awards in the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 and 2016 ICC World Twenty20. Kohli is also the highest scorer in T20Is as of November 2022.[249] In 2017, Ravichandran Ashwin became the fastest cricketer in history to reach 250 wickets.[250]

Fan following edit

 
Supporters of the Indian cricket team waving the Indian flag during match between India and Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground

Owing to the massive Indian diaspora in nations like Australia, England and South Africa, a large Indian fan turnout is expected whenever India plays in each of these nations. There have been a number of official fan groups that have been formed over the years, including the Swami Army or Indian Army,[251] the Indian equivalent of the Barmy Army, that were very active in their support when India toured Australia in 2003/2004. They are known to attribute a number of popular Indian songs to the cricket team.[252]

Fan rivalry and cross-border tension has created a strong rivalry between the Indian and the Pakistani cricket teams. In tours between these two nations, cricket visas are often employed to accommodate for the tens of thousands of fans wishing to cross the border to watch cricket. This intense fan dedication is one of the major causes of the BCCI's financial success.[253]

However, there are downsides to having such a cricket-loving population. Many Indians hold cricket very close to their hearts and losses are not received well by the Indian population. In some cases, particularly after losses to Pakistan or after a long string of weak performances, there have been reports of player effigies being burnt in the streets and vandalism of player homes.[254] In many cases, players have come under intense attention from the media for negative reasons, this has been considered one of the reasons for Ganguly being left out of the Indian team. At times, when a match is surrounded by controversy, it has resulted in a debacle. For example, when India slid to defeat against Australia at Brabourne Stadium in 1969, fans began throwing stones and bottles onto the field as well as setting fire to the stands, before laying siege to the Australian dressing rooms.[255] During the same tour, a stampede occurred at Eden Gardens when tickets were oversold and India fell to another loss; the Australian team bus was later stoned with bricks.[256] A similar event occurred during the 1996 Cricket World Cup, where India were losing the semi-final to Sri Lanka at Eden Gardens. In this case, the fan behaviour was directed at the Indian team in disappointment at their lacklustre performance. An armed guard had to be placed at the home of captain Mohammad Azharuddin to ensure his safety.[256] In 1999, a riot occurred in a Test against Pakistan at Eden Gardens after a collision with Pakistani paceman Shoaib Akhtar saw Sachin run out, forcing police to eject spectators and the game to be played in an empty stadium.In 2006, a string of low scores resulted in Tendulkar being booed by the Mumbai crowd when he got out against England.[257]

 
Sudhir Kumar Chaudhary, a fan of the Indian cricket team, travels to all Indian home games with his body painted as the Indian flag.[258][259]

Often, fans engage in protests regarding players if they believe that regionalism has affected selection, or because of regional partisan support for local players. In 2005, when Ganguly was dropped from the team, Ganguly's home town Kolkata erupted in protests.[260] India later played a match against South Africa in Kolkata. The Indian team was booed by the crowd who supported South Africa instead of India in response to Ganguly's dropping.[261] Similar regional divisions in India regarding selection have also caused protests against the team, with political activists from the regional Kalinga Kamgar Sena party in Odisha disrupting the arrival of the team in Cuttack for an ODI over the lack of a local player in the team, with one activist manhandling coach Greg Chappell.[262] Similar treatment was handed to Sunil Gavaskar in the 1987 World Cup Semi Finals by crowds at Wankhede Stadium when he got bowled by Phillip DeFreitas.[257]

A successful string of results, especially victories against the arch-rival Pakistan or victories in major tournaments such as the World Cup are greeted with particular ecstasy from the Indian fans.[263][264][265]

See also edit

References edit

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india, national, cricket, team, this, article, about, team, women, team, india, women, national, cricket, team, india, national, cricket, team, represents, india, international, cricket, governed, board, control, cricket, india, bcci, full, member, internation. This article is about the men s team For the women s team see India women s national cricket team The India men s national cricket team represents India in men s international cricket It is governed by the Board of Control for Cricket in India BCCI and is a Full Member of the International Cricket Council ICC with Test One Day International ODI and Twenty20 International T20I status IndiaNickname s Men in BlueAssociationBoard of Control for Cricket in IndiaPersonnelCaptainRohit SharmaCoachRahul DravidBatting coachVikram RathourBowling coachParas MhambreyFielding coachT DilipHistoryTest status acquired1931International Cricket CouncilICC statusFull Member 1926 ICC regionACCICC RankingsCurrent 3 Best everTest1st1st 1 April 1973 ODI1st1st January 2013 T20I1st1st 1 2 28 March 2014 TestsFirst Testv England at Lord s London 25 28 June 1932Last Testv England at Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium Dharamshala 7 9 March 2024TestsPlayedWon LostTotal 4 579178 178 222 draws 1 tie This year 5 65 1 0 draws World Test Championship appearances2 first in 2019 2021 Best resultRunners up 2019 21 2021 23 One Day InternationalsFirst ODIv England at Headingley Leeds 13 July 1974Last ODIv South Africa at Boland Park Paarl 21 December 2023ODIsPlayedWon LostTotal 6 1 055559 443 9 ties 44 no results This year 7 00 0 0 ties 0 no results World Cup appearances13 first in 1975 Best resultChampions 1983 2011 Twenty20 InternationalsFirst T20Iv South Africa at Wanderers Stadium Johannesburg 1 December 2006Last T20Iv Afghanistan at M Chinnaswamy Stadium Bangalore 17 January 2024T20IsPlayedWon LostTotal 8 219140 68 5 ties 6 no results This year 9 32 0 1 tie 0 no results T20 World Cup appearances8 first in 2007 Best resultChampions 2007 Test kitODI kitT20I kitAs of 9 March 2024 The team played its first international match on 25 June 1932 in a Test against England at Lord s Cricket Ground in London becoming the sixth team to be granted Test cricket status India s first Test victory was in 1952 and success was limited in the team s first fifty years of international cricket with only 35 wins in 196 Tests 10 However they gained strength in the 1970s with the emergence of the Indian spin quartet and players like Sunil Gavaskar Gundappa Viswanath and Kapil Dev In men s limited overs cricket India made its ODI debut against England in 1974 and its T20I debut against South Africa in 2006 India s men s national cricket team has won five major ICC tournaments winning the Cricket World Cup twice 1983 and 2011 11 the ICC T20 World Cup once 2007 and the ICC Champions Trophy twice 2002 and 2013 They have also finished as runners up in the World Cup twice 2003 and 2023 the T20 World Cup once 2014 the Champions Trophy twice 2000 and 2017 and the ICC World Test Championship finals in the first two editions 2021 2023 India was the second team after the West Indies to win the World Cup and the first to win the competition on home soil after winning it in 2011 They have won the Asia Cup eight times in 1984 1988 1990 91 1995 2010 2016 2018 and 2023 and have finished runners up three times 1997 2004 2008 India also won a gold medal in the 2022 Asian Games Other achievements include winning the ICC Test Championship Mace five times and the ICC ODI Championship Shield once As of December 2023 update the team is top of the ICC rankings for Tests ODIs and T20Is 12 With such success it is one of the most successful teams in international cricket 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1700s 1918 1 2 Test match status 1918 1970 1 3 One day cricket and ICC Cricket World Cup success 1970 1985 1 4 Late 20th century 1985 2000 1 5 21st century 2 Governing body 2 1 Selection committee 3 Team colours 4 Sponsorship 4 1 Team sponsorship 4 2 Official partners 4 3 Official broadcasters 5 International grounds 6 Captains 7 Current squad 7 1 Pay grade 8 Coaching staff 9 Tournament history 9 1 ICC World Test Championship 9 2 ICC Cricket World Cup 9 3 ICC T20 World Cup 9 4 ICC Champions Trophy 9 5 ACC Asia Cup 9 6 Other tournaments 9 6 1 Asian Games 9 6 2 Commonwealth Games 10 Honours 10 1 ICC 10 2 ACC 10 3 Others 11 Statistics 11 1 Tests 11 2 One Day Internationals 11 3 Twenty20 Internationals 12 Individual records 13 Fan following 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 16 1 Bibliography 16 2 Cited sources 17 External linksHistory editSee also Cricket in India History Early history 1700s 1918 edit See also History of cricket in India to 1918 The British brought cricket to India in the early 1700s with the first cricket match played in 1721 14 It was played and adopted by Kolis of Gujarat because they were sea pirates and outlaws who always loot the British ships so East India Company tried to manage the Kolis in cricket and been successful 15 16 17 In 1848 the Parsi community in Mumbai formed the Oriental Cricket Club the first cricket club to be established by Indians After slow beginnings the Europeans eventually invited the Parsis to play a match in 1877 18 By 1912 the Parsis Hindus Sikhs and Muslims of Bombay played a quadrangular tournament with the Europeans every year 18 In the early 1900s some Indians went on to play for the England cricket team Some of these such as Ranjitsinhji and Duleepsinhji were greatly appreciated by the British and their names went on to be used for the Ranji Trophy and Duleep Trophy two major first class tournaments in India In 1911 an Indian men s cricket team captained by Bhupinder Singh of Patiala went on their first official tour of the British Isles but only played English county teams and not the England cricket team 19 20 nbsp C K Nayudu India s first Test cricket captain Test match status 1918 1970 edit See also History of cricket in India from 1918 19 to 1945 History of cricket in India from 1945 46 to 1960 and History of cricket in India from 1960 61 to 1970 India was invited to the International Cricket Council in 1926 and made their debut as a Test playing nation in England in 1932 led by CK Nayudu who was considered the best Indian batsman at the time 21 The one off Test match between the two sides was played at Lord s in London The team was not strong in their batting 22 at this point and went on to lose by 158 runs 23 India hosted its first men s Test cricket series in 1933 England was the visiting team that played two Tests in Bombay now Mumbai and Calcutta now Kolkata The visitors won the series 2 0 The Indian team continued to improve throughout the 1930s and 1940s but did not achieve an international victory during this period In the early 1940s India did not play any men s Test cricket due to World War II The team s first series as an independent country was in late 1947 against Don Bradman s Australian cricket team in England in 1948 a name given to the Australia national cricket team of that time It was also the first Test series India played which was not against England Australia men s cricket team won the five match series 4 0 with Bradman tormenting the Indian bowling in his final Australian summer 24 India subsequently played their first Test series at home not against England but against the West Indies in 1948 West Indies won the five Test series 1 0 25 nbsp Lala Amarnath batting during a match against Middlesex at Lord s c 1936 26 nbsp Elizabeth II with members of the Indian cricket team during their tour of England in 1952 India recorded their first Test victory in their 24th match against England at Madras in 1952 27 Later in the same year they won their first Test series which was against Pakistan 28 They continued their improvement throughout the early 1950s with a series win against New Zealand in 1956 However they did not win again in the remainder of the decade and lost badly to strong Australian and English sides On 24 August 1959 India lost by an innings in the Test to complete the only 5 0 whitewash ever inflicted by England 29 The next decade saw India s reputation develop as a team with a strong record at home They won their first Test series against England at home in 1961 62 and also won a home series against New Zealand They managed to draw home series against Pakistan and Australia and another series against England In this same period India also won its first series outside the subcontinent against New Zealand in 1967 68 30 The key to India s bowling in the 1970s were the Indian spin quartet Bishan Singh Bedi E A S Prasanna B S Chandrasekhar and Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan This period also saw the emergence of two of India s best ever batsmen Sunil Gavaskar and Gundappa Viswanath Indian pitches have had the tendency to support spin and the spin quartet exploited this to create collapses in opposing batting line ups 31 32 These players were responsible for the back to back series wins in 1971 in the West Indies and in England under the captaincy of Ajit Wadekar Gavaskar scored 774 runs in the West Indian series while Dilip Sardesai s 112 played a big part in their one Test win 33 34 35 One day cricket and ICC Cricket World Cup success 1970 1985 edit See also History of cricket in India from 1970 71 to 1985 The advent of men s One Day International ODI cricket in 1971 created a new dimension in the cricket world However India was not considered strong in ODIs at this point and batsmen such as the captain Gavaskar were known for their defensive approach to batting India began as a weak team in ODIs and did not qualify for the second round in the first two editions of the Cricket World Cup 36 Gavaskar infamously blocked his way to 36 not out off 174 balls against England in the first World Cup in 1975 India scored just 132 for 3 and lost by 202 runs 37 In contrast India fielded a strong team in Test matches and was particularly strong at home where their combination of stylish batsmen and beguiling spinners were at their best India set a then Test record in the third Test against the West Indies at Port of Spain in 1976 when they chased 403 to win thanks to 112 from Viswanath 38 In November 1976 the team established another record by scoring 524 for 9 declared against New Zealand at Kanpur without any individual batsman scoring a century 39 There were six fifties the highest being 70 by Mohinder Amarnath 40 This innings was only the eighth instance in Test cricket where all eleven batsmen reached double figures 41 nbsp Graph showing India s Test match results against all Test match teams from 1932 to September 2006 During the 1980s India developed a more attack minded batting line up with stroke makers such as the wristy Mohammad Azharuddin Dilip Vengsarkar and all rounders Kapil Dev and Ravi Shastri India won the Cricket World Cup in 1983 defeating the favourites and the two time defending champions West Indies in the final at Lord s owing to a strong bowling performance In spite of this the team performed poorly in the Test arena including 28 consecutive Test matches without a victory In 1984 India won the Asia Cup and in 1985 won the World Championship of Cricket in Australia Apart from this India remained a weak team outside the Indian subcontinent India s Test series victory in 1986 against England remained the last Test series win by India outside the subcontinent for the next 19 years The 1980s saw Gavaskar and Kapil Dev India s best all rounder to date at the pinnacle of their careers Gavaskar made a Test record 34 centuries as he became the first man to reach the 10 000 run mark Kapil Dev later became the highest wicket taker in Test cricket with 434 wickets 42 The period was also marked by an unstable leadership with Gavaskar and Kapil exchanging the captaincy several times 43 44 Late 20th century 1985 2000 edit See also History of cricket in India from 1985 86 to 2000 The addition of Sachin Tendulkar and Anil Kumble to the national side in 1989 and 1990 further improved the team The following year Javagal Srinath India s fastest bowler since Amar Singh made his debut Despite this during the 1990s India did not win any of its 33 Tests outside the subcontinent while it won 17 out of its 30 Tests at home After being eliminated by neighbours Sri Lanka on home soil at the 1996 Cricket World Cup semi final the team underwent a year of change as Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid later to become captains of the team made their debut in the same Test at Lord s Tendulkar replaced Azharuddin as captain in late 1996 but after a personal and team form slump Tendulkar relinquished the captaincy and Azharuddin was reinstated at the beginning of 1998 45 nbsp With 619 wickets Anil Kumble is the world s fourth highest wicket taker in Tests and India s highest Test and ODI wicket taker 46 After failing to reach the semi finals at the 1999 Cricket World Cup Tendulkar was again made captain and had another poor run losing 3 0 on a tour of Australia and then 2 0 at home to South Africa Tendulkar resigned vowing never to captain the team again 21st century edit See also History of cricket in India from 2000 01 The team was further damaged in 2000 when former captain Azharuddin and fellow batsman Ajay Jadeja were implicated in a match fixing scandal and given life and five year bans respectively 47 48 This period was described by the BBC as the Indian cricket s worst hour 49 However the new core Tendulkar Dravid Kumble and Ganguly swore not to let this happen to them again and led Indian cricket out of the dark times The first three put aside personal ambitions to let Ganguly lead them into a new era 50 The Indian team underwent major improvements under the captaincy of Ganguly and the guidance of John Wright India s first foreign coach 51 52 In the Kolkata Test match India became only the third team in the history of Test cricket to win a Test match after following on Australian captain Steve Waugh labelled India as the Final Frontier because of his side s inability to win a Test series in India 53 In 2002 India were joint winners of the ICC Champions Trophy with Sri Lanka and then went to the 2003 Cricket World Cup in South Africa where they reached the final only to be beaten by Australia A convincing ODI series win in Pakistan in early 2006 following a loss in the Test series gave India the world record of 17 successive ODI victories while batting second 54 In September 2007 India won the first ever ICC Men s T20 World Cup held in South Africa beating Pakistan by five runs in the final 55 On 2 April 2011 India won the 2011 Cricket World Cup by defeating Sri Lanka in the final thus becoming the third team after West Indies and Australia to win the World Cup twice 56 India also became the first team to win the World Cup on home soil 57 India defeated England in the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final and captain M S Dhoni became the first men s cricket team captain in history to win the three major ICC trophies namely the Cricket World Cup ICC Men s T20 World Cup and ICC Champions Trophy 58 59 nbsp Indian players celebrating after taking a wicket against New Zealand in 2010 In the 2014 ICC Men s World Twenty20 hosted in Bangladesh India narrowly missed out on another ICC trophy by losing to Sri Lanka in the final 60 India was knocked out of the 2015 Cricket World Cup in the semi final to eventual winners Australia 61 India then began 2016 by winning the 2016 Asia Cup remaining unbeaten throughout the tournament 62 The team were favourites to win the 2016 ICC World Twenty20 which was being held at home but lost in the semi final to eventual champions West Indies 63 India defeated Pakistan in their first game of the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy but lost to the same opponents in the final the first time they had met at this stage of a tournament since 2007 64 65 The Indian team s next major global tournament was the 2019 Cricket World Cup where the team finished first in the group stage with seven wins and only one loss which came against host nation England 66 They made the semis but lost to New Zealand by 18 runs 67 Rohit Sharma was the highest run scorer for the team with 648 runs India played the 2021 ICC World Test Championship Final against New Zealand in Southampton in which they lost by eight wickets 68 India qualified for the semi finals in the 2022 T20 World Cup but lost to England by ten wickets After a 3 1 series win against Australia on home soil 69 India played the 2023 ICC World Test Championship final against Australia at The Oval in which they lost by 209 runs 70 India went on to win the 2023 Asia Cup final against Sri Lanka in R Premadasa Stadium by ten wickets 71 Kuldeep Yadav was the player of the tournament with nine wickets Meanwhile the Indian men s cricket team secured a gold medal in 2022 Asian games due to higher seeding after the final against Afghanisthan was washed out 72 73 India in their first game of Cricket World Cup 2023 defeated Australia by six wickets but after defeating New Zealand in the semi finals by 70 runs they lost to their same opponent Australia in the final by six wickets resulting in another win for the Aussies and lifting the World Cup after eight years for the sixth time Virat Kohli was the highest run scorer of the ODI World Cup with 765 runs Additionally Kohli made history by achieving his 50th ODI century at the Cricket World Cup 74 Governing body editMain article Board of Control for Cricket in India The Board of Control for Cricket in India BCCI is the governing body for the Indian cricket team and first class cricket in India The Board has been operating since 1929 and represents India at the International Cricket Council ICC Its headquarters is situated in the Cricket centre at Churchgate in Mumbai Maharashtra Amongst the richest sporting organisations in the world it sold media rights for India s matches from 2006 to 2010 for 612 000 000 75 Roger Binny is present BCCI president and Jay Shah is secretary The International Cricket Council determines India s upcoming matches through its future tours program However the BCCI with its influential financial position in the cricketing world has often challenged the ICC s program and called for more series between India Australia and England which are more likely to earn more revenue as opposed to tours with Bangladesh or Zimbabwe 76 In the past the BCCI has also come into conflict with the ICC regarding sponsorships 77 Selection committee edit Main article India national cricket team selectors Selection for the Indian cricket team occurs through the BCCI s zonal selection policy where each of the five zones is represented by one selector and one of the members nominated by BCCI as the chairman of the selection committee This has sometimes led to controversy as to whether these selectors are biased towards their zones 78 Until 18 November 2022 Chetan Sharma was the chief selector and Debashish Mohanty Harvinder Singh and Sunil Joshi were members The entire panel was sacked after the unsuccessful performance of the team in 2022 ICC Men s T20 World Cup 79 On 7 January 2023 Sharma was again appointed as the chief selector along with Shiv Sunder Das Subroto Banerjee Salil Ankola and Sridharan Sharath 80 On 17 February 2023 Sharma resigned from his post after a sting operation by a private news channel saw him make several loose comments on the Indian team with Shiv Sunder Das replacing him and acting as an interim chief selector 81 On 4 July 2023 Ajit Agarkar was appointed as the new chief selector and replaced Sharma 82 He joined Das Banerjee Ankola and Sharath on the selection committee 83 Team colours editIndia plays its Test cricket matches with the traditional cricket whites with navy blue caps and helmets The uniforms worn in limited overs matches have different shades of blue for ODIs and T20Is with sometimes a splash of the colours that are present in the Indian flag 84 nbsp India s cricket kit during the World Championship of Cricket During the 1992 and 1999 Cricket World Cups the Indian team s kit was sponsored by ISC and ASICS respectively 85 86 but had been without an official kit sponsor until 2001 With no official kit sponsor for the Indian team Omtex manufactured the shirts and pants for the team while some players chose to wear pants provided to them by their individual sponsors like Adidas and Reebok until December 2005 In December 2005 Nike outbid its competitors Adidas and Reebok and acquired the contract for five years which started in January 2006 ahead of Indian team s tour to Pakistan 87 Nike was a long time kit supplier to team India with two extensions for a period of five years each time in 2011 88 and 2016 89 respectively After Nike ended its contract in September 2020 90 MPL Sports Apparel amp Accessories a subsidiary of online gaming platform Mobile Premier League replaced Nike as the kit manufacturer in November 2020 ahead of Indian team s tour to Australia which was supposed to run until December 2023 91 92 In November 2022 MPL Sports decided to exit the deal before the end of their contract and hand over their rights to Kewal Kiran Clothing Limited KKCL 93 In January 2023 MPL appointed Kewal Kiran Clothing Limited KKCL and Killer Jeans a brand owned by KKCL as interim sponsors until May 2023 94 95 In February 2023 it was announced that Adidas will begin a five year sponsorship deal in June 2023 ahead of ICC World Test Championship final replacing KKCL 96 In May 2023 BCCI officially announced Adidas as their kit sponsor for the next five years running until March 2028 97 98 99 Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor 100 1992 ISC 1999 ASICS ITC Limited Wills amp ITC Hotels 1993 2001 2001 2005 Omtex Sahara 2006 2013 Nike 2014 2017 Star India 2017 2019 OPPO 2019 2020 BYJU s 2020 2022 MPL Sports 2023 Killer Jeans 2023 present Adidas Dream11 Sponsorship for ICC Tournaments Tournament Kit Manufacturer Sleeve Sponsor 1975 Cricket World Cup 1979 Cricket World Cup 1983 Cricket World Cup 1987 Cricket World Cup 1992 Cricket World Cup ISC 1996 Cricket World Cup Wills 1998 ICC KnockOut Trophy 1999 Cricket World Cup ASICS 2000 ICC KnockOut Trophy 2002 ICC Champions Trophy Omtex 2003 Cricket World Cup Aamby Valley 2004 ICC Champions Trophy Sahara 2006 ICC Champions Trophy Nike 2007 Cricket World Cup 2007 ICC Men s T20 World Cup 2009 ICC Men s T20 World Cup 2009 ICC Champions Trophy 2010 ICC Men s T20 World Cup 2011 Cricket World Cup 2012 ICC Men s T20 World Cup 2013 ICC Champions Trophy 2014 ICC Men s T20 World Cup Star India 2015 Cricket World Cup 2016 ICC Men s T20 World Cup 2017 ICC Champions Trophy OPPO 2019 Cricket World Cup 2021 ICC World Test Championship MPL Sports BYJU s 2021 ICC Men s T20 World Cup 2022 ICC Men s T20 World Cup 2023 ICC World Test Championship Adidas 2023 Cricket World Cup Dream11 2024 ICC Men s T20 World CupSponsorship editCurrent Sponsors amp Partners 101 Team sponsor Dream11 Kit sponsor Adidas Title sponsor IDFC FIRST Bank Official partner s SBI LifeCampaAtomberg Technologies PRAN RFL Group Mr Noodles Official broadcaster Viacom18 Sports18 amp JioCinema Team sponsorship edit Dream11 Sporta Technologies Pvt Ltd was announced as the sponsor for the team on 1 July 2023 102 Their sponsorship is supposed to run until 31 March 2026 for a period of three years 103 Previously BYJU s was the sponsor for the Indian team from 5 September 2019 until 31 March 2023 after OPPO handed over the rights to them 104 OPPO s sponsorship was supposed to run from 2017 until 2022 but they handed over to BYJU s On 7 March 2022 BYJU s extended its sponsorship for one year 105 106 Previously the Indian team has been sponsored by BYJU s from September 2019 until March 2023 OPPO from May 2017 until August 2019 Star India from January 2014 until March 2017 107 Sahara India Pariwar from June 2001 until December 2013 108 109 and ITC Limited with Wills and ITC Hotels brands from June 1993 until May 2001 110 111 Official partners edit On 9 January 2024 BCCI announced Campa and Atomberg Technologies as official partners for its domestic amp international season during 2024 26 112 On 20 September 2023 BCCI announced SBI Life as the official partner for its domestic amp international season during 2023 26 113 In August 2023 IDFC First Bank replaced Mastercard as the current title sponsor for all international and domestic matches played in India for the 2023 26 season 114 The title sponsorship was initially given to Paytm for all matches played between 2015 and 2023 115 but they handed over to Mastercard in 2022 On 30 August 2019 following the conclusion of the expression of interest process for official partners rights the BCCI announced that Sporta Technologies Pvt Ltd Dream11 LafargeHolcim ACC Cements and Ambuja Cements and Hyundai Motors India Ltd have acquired the official partners rights for the BCCI International and Domestic matches during 2019 2023 116 Disney Star and Airtel have been title sponsors previously 117 118 Official broadcasters edit Viacom18 is the official broadcaster until March 2028 for all the men s international and domestic matches played in India 119 120 Sports18 telecasts the international and domestic matches on TV while it is live streamed on JioCinema as OTT over the top platform 121 International grounds editMain article List of international cricket grounds in India nbsp nbsp Narendra Modi nbsp Sawai Mansingh nbsp Barabati nbsp Y S Rajasekhara Reddy nbsp Wankhede nbsp Brabourne nbsp MCA nbsp SVN Raipur nbsp Eden Gardens nbsp ACA nbsp Arun Jaitley nbsp Green Park nbsp Thiruvananthapuram nbsp HPCA nbsp Rajiv Gandhi Hyderabad nbsp Chinnaswamy nbsp Chidambaram nbsp I S Bindra nbsp Holkar nbsp Rajiv Gandhi Dehradun nbsp VCA nbsp JSCA nbsp SCA nbsp Atal Bihari Vajpayee nbsp V S Pathikclass notpageimage Locations of active international stadiums in India There are numerous world renowned cricket stadiums located in India Most grounds are under the administration of various state cricket boards as opposed to being under the control of the BCCI The Bombay Gymkhana was the first ground in India to host a full scale cricket match featuring an Indian cricket team This was between the Parsis and the Europeans in 1877 The first stadium to host a Test match in India was also the Gymkhana Ground in Bombay in 1933 the only Test it ever hosted The second and third Tests in the 1933 series were hosted at Eden Gardens and Chepauk The Feroz Shah Kotla Ground in Delhi was the first stadium to host a Test match after independence a draw against the West Indies in 1948 the first of a five Test series There are 21 stadiums in India that have hosted at least one official Test match In recent years there has been an increase in the number of world class cricket stadiums in India 122 123 India currently has the world s largest cricket stadium 124 125 The Narendra Modi Stadium is a cricket stadium in Ahmedabad Gujarat India Eden Gardens in Kolkata has hosted the most Tests and also has the third largest seating capacity of any cricket stadium in the world Founded in 1864 it is one of the most historical stadiums in India having hosted numerous historical and controversial matches 126 127 Other major stadiums in India include the Arun Jaitley Cricket Stadium which was established in 1883 and hosted memorable matches including Anil Kumble s ten wickets in an innings haul against Pakistan 128 The Bombay Gymkhana hosted the first Test match in India which is the only Test it has hosted to date 129 Wankhede Stadium established in 1974 has a capacity to hold 33 000 spectators and is currently the most popular venue in the city It has hosted 24 Test matches It was the unofficial successor of the Brabourne Stadium which is also located in Mumbai Mumbai is often considered the cricketing capital of India because of its fans and the talent it produces see Mumbai cricket team Thus the stadium regularly hosts major Test matches 130 The M A Chidambaram Stadium in Chepauk is also considered to be an important historical Indian cricket ground established in the early 1900s and it was the site of India s first Test victory 131 Captains editMain article List of India national cricket captains A total of 35 men have captained the Indian men s cricket team in at least one Test match although only six have led the team in more than 25 matches and six have captained the team in men s ODIs but not Tests India s first captain of the men s cricket team was C K Nayudu who led the team in four matches against England one in England in 1932 and a series of three matches at home in 1933 34 Lala Amarnath India s fourth captain of the men s cricket team and the first Indian to score a century in Test cricket while playing for India led the team in its first Test match after Indian independence He also captained the side to its first Test victory and first series win both in a three match series at home against Pakistan in 1952 53 From 1952 until 1961 62 India men s cricket team had a number of captains such as Vijay Hazare Polly Umrigar and Nari Contractor 132 133 The Nawab of Pataudi Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi was the men s team s captain for 36 Test matches from 1961 62 to 1969 70 returning for another four matches against West Indies in 1974 75 In the early years of his captaincy tenure the team was whitewashed in the West Indies England and Australia However in 1967 68 Pataudi led India men s cricket team on its maiden New Zealand tour which ended in India winning the Test series 3 1 134 In 1970 71 Ajit Wadekar took over the captaincy from Pataudi Under Wadekar s captaincy India registered its first Test series win in the West Indies and England India played its first men s ODI in 1974 also under his captaincy 135 India won its first men s ODI under the captaincy of Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan in the 1975 Cricket World Cup against East Africa Between 1975 76 and 1978 79 Bishan Singh Bedi captained the team in 22 men s Tests and four ODIs winning six Tests and one ODI 136 137 Sunil Gavaskar took over as men s Test and ODI captain in 1978 79 leading India in 47 Test matches and 37 ODIs winning nine Tests and 14 ODIs He was succeeded by Kapil Dev in the 1980s who captained for 34 Test matches including four victories Kapil Dev led India to victory in 39 of his 74 ODIs in charge including the 1983 Cricket World Cup Kapil Dev also captained India s 2 0 Test series victory in England in 1986 Between 1987 88 and 1989 90 India had three captains in Dilip Vengsarkar Ravi Shastri and Krishnamachari Srikkanth Vengsarkar took over the captaincy from Kapil Dev after the 1987 Cricket World Cup Although he started with two centuries in his first series as captain his captaincy period was turbulent and he lost the job following a disastrous tour of the West Indies in early 1989 and a stand off with the Indian Cricket Board BCCI 138 139 India has had six regular Test captains of the men s cricket team since Mohammad Azharuddin took charge in 1989 Azharuddin led the team in 47 Test matches from 1989 90 to 1998 99 winning 14 and in 174 ODIs winning 90 He was followed by Sachin Tendulkar who captained the men s cricket team in 25 Test matches and 73 ODIs in the late 1990s Tendulkar was relatively unsuccessful 140 141 as a captain winning only four Test matches and 23 ODIs Sourav Ganguly became the regular captain of the men s team in both Tests and ODIs in 2000 142 He remained captain until 2005 06 and became the then most successful Indian captain winning 21 of his 49 Test matches in charge and 76 of his 146 ODIs Under his captaincy India became the joint winners of the 2002 ICC Champions Trophy with Sri Lanka and the runners up of the 2003 Cricket World Cup India lost only three Tests at home under Ganguly and managed to draw Test series in England and Australia Rahul Dravid took over as men s Test captain in 2005 In 2006 he led India to its first Test series victory in the West Indies in more than 30 years 143 In September 2007 MS Dhoni was named as the new captain of the men s ODI and T20I teams after Dravid stepped down from the post Soon after taking up the captaincy Dhoni led the team to the inaugural World men s Twenty20 title Anil Kumble was appointed Test captain in November 2007 but retired from international cricket in November 2008 after captaining in 14 Tests Dhoni succeeded him as the men s Test captain making him the captain in all formats Under the captaincy of Dhoni the Indian men s cricket team held the number one position in the ICC Men s Test Team Rankings for 21 months from November 2009 to August 2011 and set a national record for most back to back ODI wins nine straight wins 144 Dhoni also led the team to victory in 2011 Cricket World Cup and 2013 ICC Champions Trophy Thus Dhoni became the first captain in history to win all three major ICC trophies namely the ICC Cricket World Cup in 2011 ICC Men s T20 World Cup in 2007 and the ICC Champions Trophy in 2013 145 However the team performed poorly in away Tests from 2011 to 2014 and Dhoni retired from Test cricket in December 2014 with Virat Kohli being named as the new Test captain 146 Dhoni resigned as captain of the ODI and T20I teams in January 2017 and Kohli succeeded him at the position 147 Under Kohli s captaincy India was unbeaten in 19 Test matches starting from a 3 0 series win over New Zealand and ending with a 2 1 series win over Australia India also had an unbeaten streak of winning nine consecutive Test series starting with a 3 0 series win over Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka and ending with a 1 0 series win over Sri Lanka at home India also became only the third team after Australia and South Africa to have won their most recent Test series simultaneously against all the other Test playing nations As per winning percentage in Test matches Kohli was India s second most successful Test captain behind Ajinkya Rahane having won more than 58 of Test matches at least two games 148 In November 2021 Rohit Sharma was appointed as the new T20I captain of the Indian men s cricket team after Kohli resigned from the role 149 Kohli led India one last time in T20Is at the T20 World Cup 2021 Under Rohit Sharma s first series as permanent captaincy India whitewashed New Zealand at home in the T20I series 3 0 150 In December 2021 Sharma was also appointed as the new ODI captain of the Indian men s cricket team replacing Kohli ahead of their away series against South Africa 151 Kohli later quit as Test captain as well after their Test series loss to South Africa 152 Sharma replaced Kohli as Test captain before the Test series against Sri Lanka 153 and is now the Full Time Captain of the Indian men s cricket team Current squad edit nbsp Rohit Sharma became captain of India s national cricket team in November 2021 The BCCI released the list of their 2023 24 annual player contracts on 28 February 2024 154 Players can still be upgraded to a Grade C annual player contract on a pro rata basis by meeting the criteria of playing a minimum of three Tests or eight ODIs or ten T20Is in the specified period 1 October 2023 to 30 September 2024 This is a list of every active player who is contracted to BCCI has played for India since March 2023 or was named in the recent Test ODI or T20I squads Uncapped players are listed in italics 155 Last updated 11 March 2024 Key Symbol Meaning CG Contract grade with BCCI No Shirt number of the player in all formats Format Denotes the player recently played in which particular format not his entire career Name Age Batting style Bowling style Domestic team IPL Team CG Forms No Captaincy Last Test Last ODI Last T20I Batters Ruturaj Gaikwad 27 Right handed Maharashtra Chennai Super Kings C ODI T20I 31 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Shubman Gill 24 Right handed Right arm off spin Punjab Gujarat Titans A Test ODI T20I 77 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Shreyas Iyer 29 Right handed Right arm leg spin Mumbai Kolkata Knight Riders Test ODI T20I 96 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Yashasvi Jaiswal 22 Left handed Right arm leg spin Mumbai Rajasthan Royals B Test T20I 64 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2024 Sarfaraz Khan 26 Right handed Right arm leg break Mumbai C Test 97 nbsp 2024 Virat Kohli 35 Right handed Right arm medium Delhi Royal Challengers Bengaluru A Test ODI T20I 18 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Devdutt Padikkal 23 Left handed Karnataka Lucknow Super Giants Test 37 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2021 Rajat Patidar 30 Right handed Madhya Pradesh Royal Challengers Bengaluru C Test ODI 87 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 Rohit Sharma 37 Right handed Right arm off break Mumbai Mumbai Indians A Test ODI T20I 45 Test ODI T20I C nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Rinku Singh 26 Left handed Right arm off break Uttar Pradesh Kolkata Knight Riders C ODI T20I 35 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Sai Sudharsan 22 Left handed Right arm leg break Tamil Nadu Gujarat Titans ODI 66 nbsp 2023 Suryakumar Yadav 33 Right handed Right arm off spin Mumbai Mumbai Indians B ODI T20I 63 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 All rounders Ravichandran Ashwin 37 Right handed Right arm off spin Tamil Nadu Rajasthan Royals A Test ODI 99 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2022 Akash Deep 27 Right handed Right arm fast medium Bengal Royal Challengers Bengaluru F Test 41 nbsp 2024 Shivam Dube 30 Left handed Right arm medium Mumbai Chennai Super Kings C T20I 25 nbsp 2019 nbsp 2024 Ravindra Jadeja 35 Left handed Slow left arm orthodox Saurashtra Chennai Super Kings A Test ODI T20I 8 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Hardik Pandya 30 Right handed Right arm medium fast Baroda Mumbai Indians A ODI T20I 33 ODI T20I VC nbsp 2018 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Axar Patel 30 Left handed Slow left arm orthodox Gujarat Delhi Capitals B Test ODI T20I 20 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Washington Sundar 24 Left handed Right arm off spin Tamil Nadu Sunrisers Hyderabad C ODI T20I 5 nbsp 2021 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Tilak Varma 21 Left handed Right arm off spin Hyderabad Mumbai Indians C ODI T20I 72 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Wicket keepers Srikar Bharat 30 Right handed Andhra Kolkata Knight Riders C Test 14 nbsp 2024 Dhruv Jurel 23 Right handed Uttar Pradesh Rajasthan Royals C Test 16 nbsp 2024 Ishan Kishan 25 Left handed Jharkhand Mumbai Indians ODI T20I 32 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 KL Rahul 32 Right handed Karnataka Lucknow Super Giants A Test ODI 1 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2022 Sanju Samson 29 Right handed Kerala Rajasthan Royals C ODI T20I 9 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Jitesh Sharma 30 Right handed Vidarbha Punjab Kings C T20I 6 nbsp 2024 Rishabh Pant 26 Left handed Delhi Delhi Capitals B T20I 17 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2022 Pace bowlers Jasprit Bumrah 30 Right handed Right arm fast Gujarat Mumbai Indians A Test ODI T20I 93 Test VC nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Deepak Chahar 31 Right handed Right arm medium Rajasthan Chennai Super Kings T20I 90 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2023 Yash Dayal 26 Right handed Left arm medium fast Uttar Pradesh Royal Challengers Bengaluru F Vidwath Kaverappa 25 Right handed Right arm fast medium Karnataka Punjab Kings F Avesh Khan 27 Right handed Right arm fast medium Madhya Pradesh Rajasthan Royals C ODI T20I 65 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Mukesh Kumar 30 Right handed Right arm medium Bengal Delhi Capitals C Test ODI T20I 49 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Prasidh Krishna 28 Right handed Right arm fast medium Karnataka Rajasthan Royals C Test ODI T20I 24 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Umran Malik 24 Right handed Right arm fast Jammu and Kashmir Sunrisers Hyderabad F ODI 21 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Mohammed Shami 33 Right handed Right arm fast Bengal Gujarat Titans A ODI 11 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2022 Arshdeep Singh 25 Left handed Left arm medium fast Punjab Punjab Kings C ODI T20I 2 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Mohammed Siraj 30 Right handed Right arm fast Hyderabad Royal Challengers Bengaluru A Test ODI T20I 73 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Shardul Thakur 32 Right handed Right arm medium Mumbai Chennai Super Kings C Test ODI 54 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2022 Jaydev Unadkat 32 Right handed Left arm medium Saurashtra Sunrisers Hyderabad ODI 91 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2018 Vijaykumar Vyshak 27 Right handed Right arm medium Karnataka Royal Challengers Bengaluru F Spin bowlers Ravi Bishnoi 23 Right handed Right arm leg spin Gujarat Lucknow Super Giants C T20I 56 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2024 Yuzvendra Chahal 33 Right handed Right arm leg spin Haryana Rajasthan Royals T20I 3 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Kuldeep Yadav 29 Left handed Left arm wrist spin Uttar Pradesh Delhi Capitals B Test ODI T20I 23 nbsp 2024 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2024 Pay grade edit BCCI awards central contracts to its players their pay is graded according to the importance of the player Players salaries are as follows 154 Grade A 7 crore US 877 000 Grade A 5 crore US 626 000 Grade B 3 crore US 376 000 Grade C 1 crore US 125 000 Grade F Fast Bowling Contracts Match fees Players also receive a match fee of 15 lakh US 19 000 per Test match 6 lakh US 7 500 per ODI and 3 lakh US 3 800 per T20I Coaching staff editPosition Name Head coach Rahul Dravid 156 Batting coach Vikram Rathour 157 Bowling coach Paras Mhambrey 158 Fielding coach T Dilip 159 Physiotherapist Nitin Patel 160 Strength and conditioning coach Sohum Desai 160 Rahul Dravid was appointed as the head coach of India from November 2021 replacing Ravi Shastri under whom India won several historic matches Dravid was also the coach of India national under 19 cricket team and India A cricket team before becoming the head coach 161 Tournament history editA red box around the year indicates tournaments played within India ICC World Test Championship edit World Test Championship record Year League stage Final Host Final Final Position Pos Matches Ded PC Pts PCT P W L D T 2019 2021 162 1 9 17 12 4 1 0 0 720 520 72 2 nbsp Rose Bowl England Lost to nbsp New Zealand by 8 wickets Runners up 2021 2023 163 2 9 18 10 5 3 0 5 216 127 58 80 nbsp The Oval England Lost to nbsp Australia by 209 runs Runners up ICC Cricket World Cup edit Main article India at the Cricket World Cup World Cup record Host and Year Round Position GP W L T NR Squad nbsp 1975 164 Group Stage 6 8 3 1 2 0 0 Squad nbsp 1979 165 Group Stage 7 8 3 0 3 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp 1983 166 Champions 1 8 8 6 2 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp 1987 167 Semi finals 3 8 7 5 2 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp 1992 168 Group Stage 7 9 8 2 5 0 1 Squad nbsp nbsp nbsp 1996 169 Semi finals 3 12 7 4 3 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1999 170 Super Six 6 12 8 4 4 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp nbsp 2003 171 Runners up 2 14 11 9 2 0 0 Squad nbsp 2007 172 Group Stage 9 16 3 1 2 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp nbsp 2011 173 Champions 1 14 9 7 1 1 0 Squad nbsp nbsp 2015 174 Semi finals 3 14 8 7 1 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp 2019 175 Semi finals 3 10 10 7 2 0 1 Squad nbsp 2023 176 Runners up 2 10 11 10 1 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp nbsp 2027 177 TBD nbsp nbsp 2031 178 Qualified as co hosts Total 2 Titles 13 13 96 63 30 1 2 ICC T20 World Cup edit T20 World Cup record Host and Year Round Position GP W L T NR Squad nbsp 2007 179 Champions 1 12 7 5 1 1 1 Squad nbsp 2009 180 Super 8s 7 12 5 2 3 0 0 Squad nbsp 2010 181 Super 8s 8 12 5 2 3 0 0 Squad nbsp 2012 182 Super 8s 5 12 5 4 1 0 0 Squad nbsp 2014 183 Runners up 2 16 6 5 1 0 0 Squad nbsp 2016 184 Semi finals 4 16 5 3 2 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp 2021 185 Super 12s 6 16 5 3 2 0 0 Squad nbsp 2022 186 Semi finals 3 16 6 4 2 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp 2024 187 Qualified nbsp nbsp 2026 188 Qualified as co hosts nbsp nbsp 2028 189 TBD nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2030 190 TBD Total 1 Title 8 8 45 28 15 1 1 ICC Champions Trophy edit Champions Trophy record Host and Year Round Position GP W L T NR Squad nbsp 1998 191 Semi finals 3 9 2 1 1 0 0 Squad nbsp 2000 192 Runners up 2 11 4 3 1 0 0 Squad nbsp 2002 193 Champions 1 12 4 3 0 0 1 Squad nbsp 2004 194 Group stage 7 12 2 1 1 0 0 Squad nbsp 2006 195 Group stage 5 10 3 1 2 0 0 Squad nbsp 2009 196 Group stage 5 8 3 1 1 0 1 Squad nbsp nbsp 2013 197 Champions 1 8 5 5 0 0 0 Squad nbsp nbsp 2017 198 Runners up 2 8 5 3 2 0 0 Squad nbsp 2025 199 Qualified nbsp 2029 200 Qualified as hosts Total 2 Titles 8 8 28 18 8 0 2 ACC Asia Cup edit Asia Cup record Host and Year Round Position GP W L T NR nbsp 1984 201 Champions 1 3 2 2 0 0 0 nbsp 1986 202 Boycotted the tournament 203 nbsp 1988 204 Champions 1 4 4 3 1 0 0 nbsp 1990 91 205 Champions 1 3 3 2 1 0 0 nbsp 1995 206 Champions 1 4 4 3 1 0 0 nbsp 1997 207 Runners up 2 4 4 1 2 0 1 nbsp 2000 208 First round 3 4 3 1 2 0 0 nbsp 2004 209 Runners up 2 6 6 3 3 0 0 nbsp 2008 210 Runners up 2 6 6 4 2 0 0 nbsp 2010 211 Champions 1 4 4 3 1 0 0 nbsp 2012 212 First round 3 4 3 2 1 0 0 nbsp 2014 213 First round 3 5 4 2 2 0 0 nbsp 2016 214 Champions 1 5 5 5 0 0 0 nbsp 2018 215 Champions 1 6 6 5 0 1 0 nbsp 2022 216 Super Fours 3 6 5 3 2 0 0 nbsp nbsp 2023 217 Champions 1 6 6 4 1 0 1 Total 8 Titles 15 16 65 43 19 1 2 Other tournaments edit Asian Games edit Asian Games record Year Round Position GP W L T NR nbsp 2010 Did Not Participate nbsp 2014 Did Not Participate nbsp 2022 218 Gold Medal 1 14 3 2 0 0 1 Total 1 Title 1 3 3 2 0 0 1 Commonwealth Games edit Commonwealth Games record Year Round Position GP W L T NR nbsp 1998 219 Group stage 9 16 3 1 1 0 1 Total 0 Title 1 1 3 1 1 0 1Honours editICC edit World Test Championship Runners up 2 2019 21 2021 23 World Cup Champions 2 1983 2011 Runners up 2 2003 2023 T20 World Cup Champions 1 2007 Runners up 1 2014 Champions Trophy Champions 2 2002 2013 Runners up 2 2000 2017 ACC edit Asia Cup Champions 8 1984 1988 1990 91 1995 2010 2016 2018 2023 Runners up 3 1997 2004 2008 Others edit Asian Games Gold medal 1 2022Statistics editMain article India national cricket team record by opponent Tests edit Main article List of India Test cricket records Head to head record Opponent Matches Won Lost Tied Draw Won Lost Drew First Last nbsp Afghanistan 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 0 00 0 00 2018 2018 nbsp Australia 107 32 45 1 29 29 90 42 05 27 10 1947 2023 nbsp Bangladesh 13 11 0 0 2 84 61 0 00 15 38 2000 2022 nbsp England 136 35 51 0 50 25 73 37 50 36 76 1932 2024 nbsp New Zealand 62 22 13 0 27 35 48 20 96 43 54 1955 2021 nbsp Pakistan 59 9 12 0 38 15 25 20 34 64 41 1952 2007 nbsp South Africa 44 16 18 0 10 36 36 40 90 23 25 1992 2023 nbsp Sri Lanka 46 22 7 0 17 47 82 15 21 36 95 1982 2022 nbsp West Indies 100 23 30 0 47 23 00 30 00 47 00 1948 2023 nbsp Zimbabwe 11 7 2 0 2 63 64 18 18 18 18 1992 2005 Total 579 178 178 1 222 30 74 30 74 38 34 1932 2024 Statistics are correct as of nbsp India v nbsp England 5th Test 7 9 March 2024 220 221 vte Most Test runs for India 222 Player Runs Average Sachin Tendulkar 15 921 53 78 Rahul Dravid 13 288 52 63 Sunil Gavaskar 10 122 51 12 Virat Kohli 8 848 49 15 VVS Laxman 8 781 45 97 Virender Sehwag 8 503 49 43 Sourav Ganguly 7 212 42 17 Cheteshwar Pujara 7 195 43 60 Dilip Vengsarkar 6 868 42 13 Mohammad Azharuddin 6 215 45 03 Most Test wickets for India 223 Player Wickets Average Anil Kumble 619 29 65 Ravichandran Ashwin 516 23 75 Kapil Dev 434 29 64 Harbhajan Singh 417 32 46 Ishant Sharma 311 32 40 Zaheer Khan 311 32 94 Ravindra Jadeja 294 24 13 Bishan Singh Bedi 266 28 71 Bhagwat Chandrasekhar 242 29 74 Javagal Srinath 236 30 49 One Day Internationals edit Main article List of India One Day International cricket records Head to head record Opponent Matches Won Lost Tied No Result Won First Last Full Members nbsp Afghanistan 4 3 0 1 0 75 00 2014 2023 nbsp Australia 151 57 84 0 10 37 74 1980 2023 nbsp Bangladesh 41 32 8 0 1 78 04 1988 2023 nbsp England 107 58 44 2 3 56 73 1974 2023 nbsp Ireland 3 3 0 0 0 100 00 2007 2015 nbsp New Zealand 118 60 50 1 7 54 09 1975 2023 nbsp Pakistan 135 57 73 0 5 42 22 1978 2023 nbsp South Africa 94 40 51 0 3 42 55 1988 2023 nbsp Sri Lanka 168 99 57 1 11 63 37 1979 2023 nbsp West Indies 142 72 64 2 4 50 70 1979 2023 nbsp Zimbabwe 66 54 10 2 0 81 82 1983 2022 Associate Members nbsp Bermuda 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 2007 2007 nbsp East Africa 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 1975 1975 nbsp Hong Kong 2 2 0 0 0 100 00 2008 2018 nbsp Kenya 13 11 2 0 0 84 62 1996 2004 nbsp Namibia 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 2003 2003 nbsp Nepal 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 2023 2023 nbsp Netherlands 3 3 0 0 0 100 00 2003 2023 nbsp Scotland 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 2007 2007 nbsp United Arab Emirates 3 3 0 0 0 100 00 1994 2015 Total 1055 559 443 9 44 52 98 1974 2023 Statistics are correct as of nbsp India v nbsp South Africa at Boland Park Paarl 21 December 2023 224 225 vte Most ODI runs for India 226 Player Runs Average Sachin Tendulkar 18 426 44 83 Virat Kohli 13 848 58 67 Sourav Ganguly 11 221 40 95 Rahul Dravid 10 889 39 15 MS Dhoni 10 773 50 58 Rohit Sharma 10 709 49 12 Mohammad Azharuddin 9 378 36 92 Yuvraj Singh 8 609 36 47 Virender Sehwag 7 995 35 37 Shikhar Dhawan 6 793 44 11 Most ODI wickets for India 227 Player Wickets Average Anil Kumble 334 30 83 Javagal Srinath 315 28 08 Ajit Agarkar 288 27 85 Zaheer Khan 269 30 11 Harbhajan Singh 265 33 47 Kapil Dev 253 27 45 Ravindra Jadeja 220 36 52 Venkatesh Prasad 196 32 30 Mohammed Shami 195 24 65 Irfan Pathan 173 29 72 Twenty20 Internationals edit Main article List of India Twenty20 International cricket records Head to head record Opponent Matches Won Lost Tied Tie Win Tie Loss No Result Won First Last ICC Full Members nbsp Afghanistan 8 6 0 0 1 0 1 75 00 2010 2024 nbsp Australia 31 19 11 0 0 0 1 61 29 2007 2023 nbsp Bangladesh 13 12 1 0 0 0 0 92 30 2009 2023 nbsp England 23 12 11 0 0 0 0 52 17 2007 2022 nbsp Ireland 7 7 0 0 0 0 0 100 00 2009 2023 nbsp New Zealand 25 12 10 1 2 0 0 54 00 2007 2023 nbsp Pakistan 12 8 3 0 1 0 0 75 00 2007 2022 nbsp South Africa 26 14 11 0 0 0 1 53 84 2006 2023 nbsp Sri Lanka 29 19 9 0 0 0 1 67 85 2009 2023 nbsp West Indies 30 19 10 0 0 0 1 63 33 2009 2023 nbsp Zimbabwe 8 6 2 0 0 0 0 75 00 2010 2022 ICC Associate members nbsp Hong Kong 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100 00 2022 2022 nbsp Namibia 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100 00 2021 2021 nbsp Nepal 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100 00 2023 2023 nbsp Netherlands 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100 00 2022 2022 nbsp Scotland 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 100 00 2007 2021 nbsp United Arab Emirates 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 100 00 2016 2016 Total 219 140 68 1 4 0 6 63 92 2006 2024 Statistics are correct as of nbsp India v nbsp Afghanistan at M Chinnaswamy Stadium Bengaluru 17 January 2024 228 229 vte Most T20I runs for India 230 Player Runs Average Strike rate Virat Kohli 4 037 52 73 137 97 Rohit Sharma 3 974 31 32 139 24 KL Rahul 2 265 37 75 139 12 Suryakumar Yadav 2 141 46 02 172 70 Shikhar Dhawan 1 759 27 92 126 36 MS Dhoni 1 617 37 60 126 13 Suresh Raina 1 605 29 18 134 87 Hardik Pandya 1 348 25 43 139 83 Yuvraj Singh 1 177 28 02 136 38 Shreyas Iyer 1 104 30 66 136 12 Most T20I wickets for India 231 Player Wickets Average Yuzvendra Chahal 96 25 09 Bhuvneshwar Kumar 90 23 10 Jasprit Bumrah 74 19 66 Hardik Pandya 73 26 71 Ravichandran Ashwin 72 23 22 Players in bold text are still active with India in T20I format Individual records editMain article List of India One Day International cricket records See also List of India Test cricketers and List of India ODI cricketers nbsp Sachin Tendulkar celebrating his 38th Test century during a match against Australia in 2008 He holds multiple world records including the world s leading run scorer and century maker in both Tests and ODIs 232 Sachin Tendulkar who began playing for India as a 16 year old in 1989 and has since become the most prolific run scorer in the history of both Test and ODI cricket holds a large number of national batting records He holds the record of most appearances in both Tests and ODIs most runs in both Tests and ODIs and most centuries in Tests 233 The highest score by an Indian is the 319 scored by Virender Sehwag in Chennai It is the second triple century in Test cricket by an Indian the first being a 309 also made by Sehwag although against Pakistan The team s highest ever score was a 759 7 against England at MA Chidambaram Stadium Chennai in 2016 while its lowest score was 36 against Australia in 2020 234 In ODIs the team s highest score is 418 5 against West Indies at Indore in 2011 12 India scored 413 5 in a match against Bermuda in 2007 World Cup which was the highest score ever in Cricket World Cup history at the time In the same match India set a world record of the highest winning margin in an ODI match of 257 runs 235 India has also had some very strong bowling figures with spin bowler Anil Kumble being a member of the elite group of four bowlers who have taken 600 Test wickets 236 In 1999 Kumble emulated Jim Laker to become the second bowler to take all ten wickets in a Test match innings when he took 10 wickets for 74 runs against Pakistan at the Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi 237 238 Many of the Indian cricket team s records are also world records for example Tendulkar s century tally in Tests and ODIs and run tally also in both Tests and ODIs 239 Dhoni s 183 not out against Sri Lanka in 2005 is the world record score by a wicketkeeper in ODIs 240 The Indian cricket team also holds the record sequence of 17 successful run chases in ODIs 241 which ended in a dramatic match against the West Indies in May 2006 which India lost by just one run 242 Tendulkar was the first batsman to score 200 runs he was unbeaten on 200 from 147 deliveries including 25 fours and 3 sixes in a single ODI innings on 24 February 2010 against South Africa in Gwalior 243 On 8 December 2011 this achievement was eclipsed by compatriot Virender Sehwag who scored 219 runs from 149 deliveries 25 fours and 7 sixes versus the West Indies in Indore 244 On 13 November 2014 the record was broken by another Indian opening batsmen Rohit Sharma who scored 264 runs from 173 deliveries 33 fours and 9 sixes against Sri Lanka in Kolkata West Bengal In 2013 Dhoni became the first captain in history to win all three major ICC trophies ICC Cricket World Cup in 2011 ICC World Twenty20 in 2007 and ICC Champions Trophy in 2013 245 246 247 248 In 2014 Kohli became the first cricketer to win back to back Man of the Series awards in the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 and 2016 ICC World Twenty20 Kohli is also the highest scorer in T20Is as of November 2022 update 249 In 2017 Ravichandran Ashwin became the fastest cricketer in history to reach 250 wickets 250 Fan following editMain article Cricket in India nbsp Supporters of the Indian cricket team waving the Indian flag during match between India and Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground Owing to the massive Indian diaspora in nations like Australia England and South Africa a large Indian fan turnout is expected whenever India plays in each of these nations There have been a number of official fan groups that have been formed over the years including the Swami Army or Indian Army 251 the Indian equivalent of the Barmy Army that were very active in their support when India toured Australia in 2003 2004 They are known to attribute a number of popular Indian songs to the cricket team 252 Fan rivalry and cross border tension has created a strong rivalry between the Indian and the Pakistani cricket teams In tours between these two nations cricket visas are often employed to accommodate for the tens of thousands of fans wishing to cross the border to watch cricket This intense fan dedication is one of the major causes of the BCCI s financial success 253 However there are downsides to having such a cricket loving population Many Indians hold cricket very close to their hearts and losses are not received well by the Indian population In some cases particularly after losses to Pakistan or after a long string of weak performances there have been reports of player effigies being burnt in the streets and vandalism of player homes 254 In many cases players have come under intense attention from the media for negative reasons this has been considered one of the reasons for Ganguly being left out of the Indian team At times when a match is surrounded by controversy it has resulted in a debacle For example when India slid to defeat against Australia at Brabourne Stadium in 1969 fans began throwing stones and bottles onto the field as well as setting fire to the stands before laying siege to the Australian dressing rooms 255 During the same tour a stampede occurred at Eden Gardens when tickets were oversold and India fell to another loss the Australian team bus was later stoned with bricks 256 A similar event occurred during the 1996 Cricket World Cup where India were losing the semi final to Sri Lanka at Eden Gardens In this case the fan behaviour was directed at the Indian team in disappointment at their lacklustre performance An armed guard had to be placed at the home of captain Mohammad Azharuddin to ensure his safety 256 In 1999 a riot occurred in a Test against Pakistan at Eden Gardens after a collision with Pakistani paceman Shoaib Akhtar saw Sachin run out forcing police to eject spectators and the game to be played in an empty stadium In 2006 a string of low scores resulted in Tendulkar being booed by the Mumbai crowd when he got out against England 257 nbsp Sudhir Kumar Chaudhary a fan of the Indian cricket team travels to all Indian home games with his body painted as the Indian flag 258 259 Often fans engage in protests regarding players if they believe that regionalism has affected selection or because of regional partisan support for local players In 2005 when Ganguly was dropped from the team Ganguly s home town Kolkata erupted in protests 260 India later played a match against South Africa in Kolkata The Indian team was booed by the crowd who supported South Africa instead of India in response to Ganguly s dropping 261 Similar regional divisions in India regarding selection have also caused protests against the team with political activists from the regional Kalinga Kamgar Sena party in Odisha disrupting the arrival of the team in Cuttack for an ODI over the lack of a local player in the team with one activist manhandling coach Greg Chappell 262 Similar treatment was handed to Sunil Gavaskar in the 1987 World Cup Semi Finals by crowds at Wankhede Stadium when he got bowled by Phillip DeFreitas 257 A successful string of results especially victories against the arch rival Pakistan or victories in major tournaments such as the World Cup are greeted with particular ecstasy from the Indian fans 263 264 265 See also edit nbsp India portal nbsp Cricket portal nbsp Sports portal nbsp World portal BCCI Awards Glossary of cricket terms India A cricket team India national under 19 cricket team India Pakistan cricket rivalry National Cricket Academy NCA Sport in India Overview of sports in IndiaReferences edit India topple Sri Lanka to become No 1 team in ICC T20 rankings News 18 2 April 1974 Archived from the original on 9 January 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2021 India ranked as No 1 cricket team in ICC T20 rankings Jagran Josh 3 April 2014 Archived from the original on 9 January 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2021 ICC Rankings International Cricket Council Test matches Team records ESPNcricinfo Test matches 2024 Team records ESPNcricinfo ODI matches Team records ESPNcricinfo ODI matches 2024 Team records ESPNcricinfo T20I matches Team records ESPNcricinfo T20I matches 2024 Team records ESPNcricinfo Das Ankush 30 August 2019 Top 10 Teams With Most Wins In Test Cricket Cricket Addictor Archived from the original on 10 March 2023 Retrieved 10 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